Br Homeopath J 2000; 89(04): 189-191
DOI: 10.1054/homp.1999.0414
Original Paper
Copyright © The Faculty of Homeopathy 2000

Inter-rater reliability of symptom repertorisation: a pragmatic empirical study

AJ Vickers
,
RA van Haselen
The Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London, UK
,
L Pang
The Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London, UK
,
S Berkovitz
The Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London, UK
› Author Affiliations

Subject Editor:
Further Information

Publication History

Received26 August 1999
revised03 March 2000

accepted21 March 2000

Publication Date:
28 May 2018 (online)

Abstract

Objective: To determine the extent to which two homeopaths agree on whether symptoms reported by patients in a proving are possibly associated with Mercurius solubilis.

Design: Blinded, inter-rater reliability study.

Participants: 104 subjects in a randomised, double-blind mercury proving.

Outcome measures: 557 symptom episodes spontaneously reported by subjects were classified as ‘mercury’ or ‘not mercury’ by two homeopaths working blind to each other's conclusions and to patient allocation.

Results: Initial agreement between homeopaths was 70.2%, a kappa of 0.39, (95% CI 0.31, 0.47). Some disagreements appear to have resulted from differing interpretations of the study instructions. After suitable correction, agreement was 76.5% and kappa 0.56 (95% CI 0.49, 0.63).

Conclusions: The study homeopaths had only a moderate level degree of agreement greater than that expected by chance. The main factor seems to have been differences between data from different sources. There is an urgent need for more research on the methods of choosing homoeopathic medicines in order to improve the reliability and validity of homoeopathic diagnoses.