Selection and Preparation of Submitted Cases
Source: www.homeopathicdirectory.com
Topic: Wood Carving
Sort Desciption: some wood-carving and have signed up for some classes. Nice to have ..... I finished the wood carving project I was doing with the woman in my class. ...
Content Inside: Council for Homeopathic Certification Pilot Project Application pilotproject@homeopathicdirectory.com Richard Pitt 415-695-8200 Selection and Preparation of Submitted Cases Cases that continue for years of various remedies before finally finding a simillimum do not need to be tracked through the entire history; a presentation of the effective remedy with adequate six month follow-up is sufficient. Some cases are decided by analytical repertorization, others by outstanding keynotes or clear miasmatic patterns, others by intuition or suggestion from another practitioner. Some are easier to explain than others; the cases selected for submission should be of the easier to explain type because no matter how successful a case was, if it is hard to explain the thought process, it will be hard for the reviewers to understand and approve it. This is not a directive to use a specific narrative style in your case submissions. Our professional journals today display many different styles of presentation but the well-presented cases share the common successful characteristics noted above, and these are what the reviewers are looking for. The following table of DOs and DON’Ts summarizes considerations for the candidate to use in selecting and preparing cases for submission. Reviewing this carefully will provide candidates with specific guidelines and help them to see how to prepare their cases in a way that assures acceptance. ➢ Select cases with clear explanation ➢ Presentation style is unimportant as long as the case is professional and is explained well ➢ An inability to successfully communicate a reasoned evaluation of remedy selection for the case is one of the most common causes for cases to be rejected by the reviewers Successful Case Preparation Factors to Consider DO DON’T Anonymity Keep it anonymous. Remove identifying details and any initials, name, or contact information from the case. Don’t include any clear identifiers of the subject. It is ...