Homeopathy¶
This page explores homeopathy as a separate topic. It is kept separate on purpose so it does not blur into the main eczema treatment guidance.
If you want the usual evidence-based eczema treatment overview, start with Treatments and Solutions. If you want the broader low-evidence and case-story context, see Incidents and Anecdotes.
Bottom line first¶
The most practical summary for parents is:
- official medical guidance does not support homeopathy as an evidence-based treatment for eczema
- eczema-specific studies are mixed and low-certainty
- published real cases include both claimed improvements and problems or worsening
- homeopathy should not replace standard eczema treatment, infection assessment, or urgent medical care
Why this page is separate¶
Homeopathy is different from the rest of the eczema treatment page for two reasons:
- it has a very different evidence status from moisturisers, steroids, tacrolimus, bleach baths, and modern biologics
- families often ask about it, so it is worth documenting carefully rather than pretending it never comes up
In this guide, homeopathy is treated as part of the incident/anecdotal track, not as part of the main medicine ladder.
What official guidance says¶
Official sources are broadly cautious or negative:
- the American Academy of Dermatology advises parents to speak with their dermatologist before adding a homeopathic treatment or stopping prescribed medicine in favor of it
- NCCIH says there is little evidence that homeopathy is effective for any specific health condition
- the NHS says there is no good-quality evidence that homeopathy is effective for any health condition
- the NICE childhood eczema guideline evidence review found insufficient evidence to recommend complementary therapies such as homeopathy in clinical practice (NICE CG57)
This does not mean parents never report benefit. It means homeopathy is not part of standard, evidence-supported eczema care.
What eczema-specific studies found¶
Controlled trials¶
| Study type | What it found | Practical interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 2009 adult placebo-controlled trial | No significant benefit over placebo | Negative trial; also small |
| 2021/2022 adult placebo-controlled preliminary trial | Results favored homeopathy numerically, but were not statistically significant | Inconclusive |
| 2023 adult placebo-controlled replication trial | Better symptom-score results than placebo over 6 months in a single-site adult study | Interesting but not enough to overturn the broader low-certainty picture |
Child and observational studies¶
| Study type | What it found | Practical interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Long-term comparative observational study in children | Homeopathy was not superior to conventional care and had higher costs | Important real-world child comparison |
| Pediatric observational studies from homeopathy clinics | Reported improvement over time | Uncontrolled; cannot show that homeopathy caused the improvement |
The shortest fair summary is:
There are some positive studies and case reports, but overall the evidence stays weak, mixed, and not guideline-changing.
Real cases¶
Real cases are worth documenting, but they need labels.
Published cases and case series¶
- A published case series reported six atopic dermatitis cases treated with classical homeopathy, including a young infant with long-term clearance reported by the authors
- Pediatric observational clinic reports from Italy also describe long-term improvement in some children
These are real cases, but they are not controlled evidence.
Practitioner-authored anecdotal case¶
- A practitioner blog described eczema clearing over about four months with homeopathic remedies and lifestyle advice
This is useful as a real-world narrative, but it is also promotional and should be treated as anecdotal.
Parent-forum uncertainty case¶
- A Reddit parent thread described a 10-month-old whose eczema became worse after two weeks of homeopathic treatment and asked whether the child needed to "detox" from the wrong remedies
This matters because it shows that real-world experience is not uniformly positive.
Safety case¶
- A published pediatric case report described suspected homeopathy-induced Stevens-Johnson syndrome in a one-year-old after a homeopathic preparation for a minor ailment
That case was not about eczema treatment, but it is important because it challenges the idea that homeopathic products are harmless by default.
Practical parent guidance¶
If you are considering homeopathy for eczema:
- do not stop prescribed eczema medicines suddenly in favor of it
- do not use it as a substitute for urgent care, infection treatment, or severe-flare assessment
- bring the exact product or remedy name, potency, and schedule to your clinician
- Beware of "Homeopathic Aggravation": A dangerous practice in alternative circles is interpreting worsening symptoms (e.g., infected crusts, spreading blisters) as a "detox". This can lead to missing severe bacterial infections or eczema herpeticum. Stop if you see objective signs of disease progression like honey-coloured rusts.
- Undisclosed Allergens: Alternative creams often do not have standardized supply chains, increasing the risk of contact allergens such as unlisted botanical extracts or essential oils.
- if you try it, document what was used, when, and what changed over the next few days and weeks. Establish an explicit stopping rule to know when to give up.
What to document if it is tried¶
If a family chooses to explore homeopathy, record:
- the exact remedy name
- the potency
- how often it was given
- who recommended it
- what other eczema treatments were being used at the same time
- what changed in itch, sleep, rash, infection signs, and distress
Without that level of detail, later review becomes guesswork.
Better question to ask¶
Instead of asking:
Does homeopathy work for eczema?
it is often more useful to ask:
What evidence exists, what are the risks of delay, and how would we know whether anything we tried actually changed the outcome?
Related pages¶
- Incidents and Anecdotes
- Treatments and Solutions
- Products and Substances
- Triggers and Tracking
- When to Get Help
Further reading¶
Official guidance¶
- American Academy of Dermatology: https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/eczema/childhood/treating/homeopathic-medicines
- NCCIH: https://www.nccih.nih.gov/health/homeopathy
- NHS: https://www.nhs.uk/tests-and-treatments/homeopathy/
Eczema-specific studies¶
- 2009 randomized placebo-controlled trial: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19887810/
- 2021/2022 randomized placebo-controlled preliminary trial: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33857943/
- 2023 replication trial: https://www.thieme-connect.com/products/ejournals/pdf/10.1055/s-0042-1760339.pdf
- Long-term comparative observational child study: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3561412/
Real cases and anecdotal sources¶
- Published homeopathy case series including atopic dermatitis cases: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7882755/
- Practitioner-written anecdotal eczema case: https://www.restorehomeopathy.com/homeopathic-case-treatment-of-eczema/
- Reddit parent thread describing worsening after homeopathic treatment: https://www.reddit.com/r/homeopathy/comments/1iuakx5/a_10_month_old_baby_is_being_treated_for_his/
- Published pediatric adverse-event report: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12126690/