Daily Mail

Your medicine by order of the Queen’s pharmacist... ground-up Berlin Wall dust

Expert debunks homeopathy and quack cures

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

THE Queen’s pharmacist is selling a ‘lamentable’ homeopathi­c remedy said to contain essence of the Berlin Wall.

Enthusiast­s of alternativ­e medicine claim the concrete wall between former West and East Germany can help improve relationsh­ips when consumed in a highly diluted form.

But the extraordin­ary treatment, on sale at Ainsworth’s, the pharmacist by appointmen­t to the Queen and Prince Charles, was highlighte­d by homeopathy critic Dr Edzard Ernst as an example of far-fetched claims made by alternativ­e medicine.

His attack was the latest salvo in the simmering row over the efficacy of these often costly treatments, many of which are available online. The professor of complement­ary medicine at Exeter University said those behind the Berlin Wall ‘treatment’ claim it carries a ‘spiritual force’.

Incredibly, and with no apparent irony, they say it will help ‘ break down walls’ between people, he added.

He explained that pieces of the Berlin Wall are ground down and mixed with lactose before being diluted multiple times until they are soluble. The final product does not contain a ‘single molecule from the wall’, but is claimed to contain its essence, he said.

He added: ‘ The lamentable thing is not that shops sell it, the lamentable thing is that people are being misinforme­d.’

Another critic of Berlin Wall therapy, writing in the journal Medical Science Monitor wrote: ‘What therapeuti­c advantage does Berlin Wall have over ordinary garden wall, or Spaghetti JuncOutspo­ken: Dr Edzard Ernst tion concrete?’ Dr Ernst said the Royal Warrant gives treatments such as the Berlin Wall therapy ‘credibilit­y’ they do not deserve.

Charles is patron of the Faculty of Homeopathy and has lobbied ministers to make more alternativ­e treatments available on the NHS. But he has been accused of promoting disproven and dangerous medical treatments while taking an ‘anti-science’ position.

Other unusual homeopathi­c remedies available on the market include ‘vacuum’ and ‘sunlight’ which involves exposing tablets made of the milk sugar lactose to a vacuum and sunlight.

Alternativ­e treatments such as chiropract­ic physical therapy also have their critics. Dr Ernst said that while these kinds of treatment may not directly harm someone taking them, research shows the patient may not seek effective convention­al medicine.

The British Chiropract­ic Associatio­n said: ‘Chiropract­ic is a registered primary healthcare profession and a safe form of treatment.’ Ainsworths, based in central London, sells the Berlin Wall remedy on its website from £4.20 for a 1g vial of lactose tablets, up to £120 for 1,000ml in liquid potency (23 per cent alcohol). A spokesman said: ‘I would not want to comment on any individual remedy. Every remedy has a large spectrum of activity.

‘They are non-toxic, non habitformi­ng, non-addictive and gentle and curative. It’s not like paracetamo­l is for pain, it doesn’t work that way.’

Clarence House has previously defended the Prince’s support of alternativ­e medicine.

A spokesman said: ‘The prince believes that safe and effective complement­ary medicine can play an important role in healthcare systems, as long as approaches are integrated with convention­al treatments, a position he has reached after years of talking to experts in many different areas of medicine.’

‘People are being misinforme­d’

 ??  ?? Pill, bitter? Dissolved fragments of the Berlin Wall are used in the remedy, inset
Pill, bitter? Dissolved fragments of the Berlin Wall are used in the remedy, inset
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