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DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1038803
© Sonntag Verlag in MVS Medizinverlage Stuttgart GmbH & Co. KG
Miasms and Social Change
Publication History
Publication Date:
26 August 2008 (online)

Summary
While the miasms have frequently been studied from the clinical perspective, little has been done about identifying their origins. However, if social factors are included among the possible environmental causes of illness, a significant pattern emerges. Study of historical, biological, anthropological and palaeopathological information reveals a number of points. There is a temporal and geographical correlation between the earliest appearances of the miasmatic diseases and the emergence of class societies. The different impact of colonisation on the health of Europeans and indigenous peoples appears contradictory until social relations are taken into account. Surveys of modern European society indicate a direct relationship between higher social status and lower mortality rates even when living standards are high. The indigenous classless societies of both North America and Australia appear to have divided illnesses into those arising from accidents or poisoning and those arising from social factors. Study of the mental aspects of the miasms is also revealing in this context. The symptoms of psora show a strong relationship to the circumstances of developing social divisions and unequal distribution of resources. The symptoms of tuberculosis (and leprosy) and syphilis show a similar relationship to the circumstances of social tension and collapse. In conclusion, it would appear that the miasms may well have their origin in the development of the first class societies, suggesting that a prerequisite of their permanent cure is the restoration of egalitarian social organisation.
Key words
Miasms - Class - Status - Disease - Colonisation - History
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RSHom William Alderson
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Norfolk, PE33 9SF
United Kingdom
Email: william_alderson@homeopathy-soh.org