Homeopathy 2024; 113(01): A1-A26
DOI: 10.1055/s-0044-1779785
Presentation Abstracts
Oral Abstracts

Recommendations for Designing, Conducting, and Reporting Clinical Observational Studies in Homeopathic Veterinary Medicine

Petra Weiermayer
1   WissHom: Scientific Society for Homeopathy, Koethen, Germany
,
Philippa Fibert
2   Department of Psychology and Pedagogic Science, St Mary’s University, Twickenham, United Kingdom
,
Michael Frass
3   Institute for Homeopathic Research, Vienna, Austria
,
Christien Klein-Laansma
4   Louis Bolk Institute, Health and Nutrition, The Netherlands
,
Susanne Ulbrich-Zürni
5   Institute of Integrative Medicine, University of Witten/Herdecke, Germany
› Author Affiliations
 

Background: Clinical observational studies are an important methodological approach in human and veterinary research, examining and describing treatment experience with good external validity. There are currently few observational studies in the field of homeopathic veterinary medicine.

Aim: To develop recommendations for designing, conducting and reporting observational studies in homeopathic veterinary medicine.

Methods: A literature review was performed using various search strategies for guidelines and checklist tools relevant for observational studies, veterinary research, and homeopathy. Useful guidelines were selected. Prior recommendations for designing and conducting observational studies in human homeopathic medicine were supplemented with recommendations for homeopathic veterinary medicine that were evaluated by an expert panel.

Results: The veterinary extension of the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology statement, STROBE-Vet, was identified as a useful tool to improve the reporting quality of observational studies, and it has been supplemented here with additional recommendations that are applicable to homeopathy. STROBE-Vet is complemented in the literature by several reports, checklists and guidelines on veterinary medicine in general, such as the Checklist for One Health Epidemiological Reporting of Evidence (COHERE) and the Animal Health Surveillance Reporting Guidelines (AHSURED). Found items that related to laboratory animal research were excluded as non-relevant.

Conclusions: Clinical observational studies are an important methodological approach, having currently unrealized potential in the field of homeopathic veterinary medicine. With relatively minor adjustments, the practical guidelines and checklists available to researchers in designing, conducting and reporting observational studies in human homeopathic medicine have been adapted for homeopathic veterinary medicine, for which high quality can be assured by implementing recommendations such as those in STROBE-Vet. With the emergence of the One Health concept, the COHERE checklist can be viewed with growing significance.

Keywords: Clinical observational studies, homeopathic veterinary medicine, guidelines, recommendations



Publication History

Article published online:
30 January 2024

© 2024. Faculty of Homeopathy. This article is published by Thieme.

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