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Please
click on the "Buy Now" button below to pay for your acute ailment
consultation with Marybeth (if you are not already seeing her):
Phone or In-Person Consultations for Short-term (Acute) Illnesses -
even if you are not already my patient!
I
work with and help many people when they come down with a bug or other
ailment. Homeopathy can be very effective in helping with many colds,
flu, urinary tract infections, stomach aches, headaches, coughs,
diarrhea, strains, sprains and injuries, and a wide variety of other
short-term illnesses.
If you are already a patient, we can figure out your remedy over the
phone and the charge is $10. That charge covers however many phone
calls are needed to help you recover from that ailment.
Please make this payment online by using Paypal. You do not have to
have a PayPal account to use Paypal and PayPal will not charge you for
the transaction. If you do not have a credit card, you may make your
Paypal payment by having the funds withdrawn from your bank account.
(I've used Paypal for many years now for purchases and can recommend
them wholeheartedly. If you have never used Paypal, you may be surprised
at how easy it is to use.)
To pay, click on the PayPal deposit button and follow the directions in
the PayPal window. After completing your payment, you will receive a
notification email from service@paypal.com indicating that you
have paid me using PayPal. Paypal also sends me a notice that you have
made your payment.
If you aren’t already
a patient and want to use homeopathy for your cold, flu or other acute
ailment, the charge is $50 plus the cost of the remedy. In this
situation, it is best we meet in person to find a remedy for your
ailment. Please call to set up an appointment.
Phone
Consultation Questionnaire for Acute Illnesses
Please save this
acute prescribing questionnaire and have it by your phone or stored in
your computer for the next time you call me for help with an acute
ailment. This questionnaire helps us collect enough information to find
a good remedy for you quickly and efficiently.
1. Onset--did the complaint come on suddenly or gradually?
2. The cause. What happened? What was going on at, or about, the time of
the occurrence?
3. Describe the pain or other feelings or sensations. Does it extend
anywhere, does it shoot anywhere? For instance, "It feels like there's a
crumb in my throat, I'm constantly trying to swallow. The pain shoots to
my left ear."
4. What does the person, or the part that's bothering the person, look
like; anything remarkable? Red skin, droopy eyes, raised spots, etc.?
5. Where on the body?
6. What makes the complaint better or worse? Consider these
possibilities: is the person or complaint better or worse with heat or
cold, bathing, warm rooms, fresh air, drafts, motion; also consider if
there is a time of day when person gets worse, what position is
best/worse; is the person better or worse with certain
stimuli--conversation, noise, light, touch, pressure, massage, music,
company, consolation, etc.
7. Additional symptoms that came with the main complaint—for instance,
pain with crying; pain with excessive salivation; pain with nausea—the
things that have come along for the ride, fellow-travelers, in other
words.
8. Discharges and their color, odor and consistency. (A discharge is
anything liquid that's coming out, oozing out, etc. from any part of the
body. So, for instance, runny nose, diarrhea, tearing and so on.)
9. General symptoms—these are all the "I" symptoms: I'm hot, I'm cold,
I'm thirsty, I'm tired, I'm sad, I'm irritable, I'm hungry, I want
pickles, etc. These symptoms are particularly important if the person,
for example, is chilly, but becomes hot with this headache.
10. The mental-emotional symptoms: Have the mental or emotional
characteristics of the person changed from how they are normally, and if
so, in what way? What is different mentally and emotionally? For
example: A child who is normally self-confident and outgoing suddenly,
with an earache, becomes weepy and clingy.
11. What does the person say? For instance: "I'm fine, leave me alone."
"Don't leave!" "I wanna go home!" "I want ice", etc. These symptoms are
particularly important if the person, for example, likes to be around
people, but with their cold wants to be left along and not talked to.
12. Thirst--is the person thirsty, not thirsty, what temperature drinks,
what kind of drinks, does he only want sips, or gulps, does he drink a
little bit frequently or a lot infrequently, and so on.
13. Fever?
14. Sweating?
15. Odors? Are odors an issue, such as bad breath, foul odors of any
sort?
16. What is most striking about the condition? What is most
peculiar--for instance, person is cold but heat and covers make them
feel worse; the person has burning pains but is better for being covered
and with hot drinks like tea.
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