Nine steps

TO PRACTICING HOMEOPATHY USING FACIAL ANALYSIS 

Homeopathic Facial Analysis (HFA) is the most straightforward and accurate way of determining a patients miasm. It allows for the selection of a remedy that will act in a constitutional way to enhance a patients health. It reduces and removes symptoms for long periods of time, using only one or in some cases a few miasmatic remedies given one at a time.

The following nine step plan demonstrates how to incorporate miasmatic prescribing using facial analysis into clinical application.

ACTION

  • Case taking
  • Taking photos

ANALYSIS

  • Choosing rubrics
  • The miasm (face)

TOOLS 

  • Homeopathic software
  • Camera

CASE MANAGEMENT

  • Potency and frequency of dose
  • Outcome of first remedy
  • Maintaining health and case management

A step by step example of the process of HFA

FIRST VISIT

  • Case is taken
  • Photos taken
  • Symptoms charted
  • Rubrics chosen from chart
  • Miasm selected from photos using facial analysis
  • Rubrics repertorized
  • Remedy selected from miasmatic group
  • Potency and frequency of dose chosen

SECOND AND OTHER VISITS

Symptoms analysed

  1. Good outcome – continue treatment using case management strategies (HFA)
  2. Poor outcome – repeat the following steps
  • Check photos to validate miasm
  • Take new photos if first set are unclear
  • Check rubrics
  • Re-repertorize
  • Change remedy or frequency of current remedy or potency of current remedy

This method has been used on all patients presenting with chronic disease
for more than two decades. Using a small number of remedies (about 50 – 70 polychrest remedies)

Results have improved across all pathology types. This has been even more so in the last few years as the method has become more streamlined. The following steps are how we practice.

1 – CASE TAKING 

The aim of case taking is to get the totality of the patients symptoms. It is not about psychoanalysis or putting the patient through a deeply reflective process. It is about finding a simillimum that will bring about better health.
General classical Homeopathic concepts apply –

  • Listening
  • Removing judgement
  • Observing patterns
  • Understanding the main complaint – what, when, how
  • Checking from top to toe for all physical complaints – current and relevant history
  • Ensuring all generals are covered – sleep, appetite, thirst, food (cravings, aversions, aggravations), bowels/urination, menses, perspiration, environmental sensitivity, positions and time factors
    Special care must be taken when using mental rubrics. There are two ways “mentals” can be used and they must be chosen very carefully as this is the area where judgment by the practitioner will lead to errors of rubric choice.

Emotional responses – use sparingly and only when they are very clear – for example weeping, anger, jealousy related to the onset continuance of the main complaint.
Circumstances – asking the patient to give a biography of their life with an emphasis on important moments is a solid way of determining the energy pattern of their life. It is not about what they think of themselves or how they would like to be but about what actually happened. Being factual means the practitioner is working on solid ground. This methodology is not suitable (or necessary) for a busy clinic but can be used with patients to highlight their own energy responses.

Examples would be a history of violence (Mind – Violence), a strong concentration on business (Mind – Business or Mind – Dreams of business) or people who spend much of their time alone (Mind – Company aversion to).

Another way circumstances provide mental rubrics is by using the emotional state of the people around the patient. For example a patient who has had three jealous partners – even though they are not jealous themselves, are attracting jealousy therefore jealousy becomes an important theme in their life (Mind -“ Jealousy). Another example is a patient who has a family who is always fighting even though they are gentle themselves, (Mind – Quarrelsome).

2 – TAKING PHOTOS

Photos are taken after the case taking is completed but prior to the analysis. This is a good time for the patient too as the practitioner has gained their confidence through the case taking process. Detailed instructions for taking photos can be found in The HFA Workbook by Louise Bentley.

Tell the patient about why you are taking photos before the consultation begins

  • Have a set way of explaining the purpose of taking the photos
  • Use simple terms like group or genetics rather than miasms
  • Do not use pathologies when describing miasms

Nine photos are required

  • Each image must show the patient holding their head as straight as possible
  • All images must be in focus and must fill the screen  ie so the patient isn’t too far away
  • The nine photos must clearly show the following aspects of the face – hairline, forehead, eyes, bridge of nose, mouth, teeth, smile, chin and ears

3 – CHOOSING RUBRICS

After taking the case and photos complete a case analysis. Symptoms are categorized into a chart as follows

MENTALS GENERALS PHYSICALS

Fearful ++
Jealousy themes ++ Dreams – vivid + Likes friends +
< night ++
> rest
Des coffee +++
Av milk +
Burning pains +++
Right sided ++
< summer
Constipation – occasional
Sinus pain, discharge yellow – occasional Headaches frontal ++ Knee pain +

Skin eruption itchy on chin

 

It is easier to determine which rubrics to choose when the whole case is clearly laid out in front of the practitioner. It is important to observe patterns, intensity of symptoms and what is unusual in the case. The aim for the repertorization is to choose between five and eight rubrics that meet the following criteria-

  • The symptom is frequent
  • The symptom is intense or distinctive
  • The symptom is unusual

MENTALS – GENERALS – PHYSICALS

By ensuring that each of these three areas has some representation (with the majority being generals) the remedies coming through will be certain to cover the case. Note that general rubrics are always the most important and if your case is mostly mental or physical, it will be more difficult to find the correct remedy.
So in our example above we might choose

  • MIND; JEALOUSY (65)
  • MIND; FRIGHTENED easily (162)
  • GENERALITIES; NIGHT, nine pm. – five am.; agg. (262)
  • GENERALITIES; FOOD and drinks; coffee; desires (51)
  • GENERALITIES; P AIN; burning; internally (195)
  • GENERALITIES; SIDE; right (225)
  • HEAD PAIN; LOCALIZATION; Forehead (430)

Note that we try to use rubrics with 15-500 remedies in them. More remedies will be on the graph but we can feel certain that the one remedy we need will be amongst the group. In the example above fourteen remedies will repertorize.

Once we know the patients miasm our choice will become much smaller. The repertorization will be reduced by another 1/7 with only the remedies belonging to the patients miasm being considered for the case.

4 – CHOOSING THE MIASM

  • Facial analysis will always determine the miasm accurately
  • Pathology is a poor indicator of miasms
  • Psora, sycosis and syphilis are the base of all miasmatic prescribing
  • Essence pictures of psora, sycosis and syphilis are incomplete and in some
    cases inaccurate – use facial analysis as the sole indicator
  • All miasms are equal in their potential for destruction

Each facial feature is influenced by psora, sycosis or syphilis or a combination of two or more miasms. Some facial features are within normal range and will not rate. Categorised features (about 75 in total) are detailed in the HFA books.

There are fifteen feature areas on each face

  1. Hairline
  2. Forehead
  3. Bridge of nose
  4. Eyes
  5. Nose
  6. Cheeks
  7. Mouth
  8. Lips
  9. Smile
  10. Teeth
  11. Chin
  12. Ears
  13. Lines
  14. Skin
  15. Asymmetry

These features and their miasmatic classifications come from more than two decades from thousands of patients – they have been clinically verified and form the basis of HFA.

Learning to apply HFA 

  • Practice on at least fifty faces before expecting to be competent
  • Use family, friends, patients, television and movies
  • Practice taking photos
  • Use the HFA book to help in defining feature parameters
  • Chart your results

It is important to take your time and judge carefully. Use The HFA Workbook or the HFA facial analysis software wizard (Complete Dynamics) as your guide – soon you will remember the features well and know when to allocate them and when to leave them out.

COLORS

Are used to describe the miasms – see Appearance and Circumstance (2003) or the HFA Workbook (2021) for a detailed description of the colour allocation. A more in depth description of the miasms (now known as a survival instinct) is written in Soul & Survival (2008). In HFA the survival instinct is a defence mechanism which incorporates the emotions, the nervous system, the immune system and the face. Colours are used as descriptors because –

  • Pathology is not an accurate way to determine a miasm
  • Colours are non-judgemental
  • Colours are easy to remember

For example, patients who are dominated by the tubercular miasm may get a cancer diagnosis and patients dominated by the cancer miasm may get tuberculosis. By removing the pathological tags we remove the disease name from our minds and focus on the true nature of the miasm which is a defence mechanism to stress.

5 – HOMEOPATHIC SOFTWARE

Provides the following benefits

  • Larger rubrics are very useful – they cast a wide net and will draw the correct remedy to the practitioners attention
  • Cases can be looked at from more than one perspective
  • Saves time

We use Complete Dynamics and RadarOpus. The package you choose must contain all the generals as grouped by Boenninghausen and Kent including modern updates of the polychrests. Complete Dynamics offers the latest HFA facial analysis software (the HFA wizard).

6 – DIGITAL CAMERA (now on everyone’s cell or mobile phone)

  • Give instant images
  • More accurate than the naked eye (smiles and lines are better observed with
    the naked eye)
  • Catch the patient in the best position
  • Allow for many extra images until the information is fully provided

WHAT TYPE OF CAMERA?
All personal phones and digital cameras have high level images. The higher the megapixels the more definition will be seen. Definition is helpful for zooming in on teeth or hairlines.

7 – POTENCY AND FREQUENCY OF DOSE

Everyone in homeopathy has different ideas about posology. VCCH commenced our clinics using Kentian prescribing but have developed the following guidelines from ongoing clinical experience. We find daily doses of 30C satisfactory for most patients and can give daily doses for one, two or many months without any aggravations because the remedy resonates with the patient via miasm and totality. Continuous or sustained improvement is checked at regular intervals using HFA case management principles.

What about aggravations?

When choosing a remedy from within the patients miasm few aggravations are encountered as long as the remedy matches the totality of symptoms and the patients miasm (as determined by facial analysis). A potency of 30C daily is suitable for even the most sensitive patient but occasionally we use 6C and often go to 200C and sometimes 1M AFTER the remedy shows it has a positive action but the case needs more impact (follow HFA case management rules properly for best outcomes).

VCCH POSOLOGY GUIDELINES 

Daily doses are suitable for almost all patients generally in 30C. Once the right remedy is found it delivers a daily dose of energy to the patient which strengthens all aspects of their being. Sustained healing and balanced emotions as well as increased energy levels will result. Daily doses can also be given in LM potency as Hahnemann advised. VCCH have used centesimal potencies for almost all clinical cases.

Patients must be checked at regular intervals to ensure the remedy still suits their case. Where a remedy does not suit a patient it must be changed. Always check the facial analysis (new photos where required) to ensure the miasm is correct. Re- repertorize on the current symptom patterns including previous important symptoms as required.

Occasionally patients with entrenched pathology will also do well on repeated doses of 200C or even 1M (see HFA case management). This type of posology must not be given until the 30C has been tested first – and then only given where the 30C was successful but didn’t sustain for the long term. The only time to increase the potency is where the case has been very good – raising the potency where a remedy has only acted partially generally does not bring about a positive result. It is better to choose another indicated remedy that matches the patients miasm.

FREQUENCY OF REPETITION

30C daily is the most common starting point for most cases – commence with a daily dose from two weeks to one month or until their next visit.

When the problem is 90% or greater improved and most or all auxiliary symptoms settled or gone withdraw the remedy. Commence again if and when symptoms decline.

If returning symptoms are different search for a different remedy.

If a patient slips back for one or two days continue the same remedy as people are always changing and re-establishing a state of balance and they may get better without changing the remedy. If the slip back continues for longer than a few days it is time to reassess the case – where it has been very good but slips a higher frequency or potency may be required.

Case management is where the real art of Homeopathy commences. Knowing when to change frequency or potency or remedy or when to stop a remedy is when you truely understand the flow of the case and the heights of health that each individual patient can attain with proper management. See HFA online training – advanced practitioner course – to learn more.

8 – OUTCOME

A well-chosen Homeopathic remedy should provide the following for our patients 70-100% improvement of the presenting complaint AND improvement in auxiliary symptoms such as

  • Sleep
  • Other pathologies
  • Well being
  • Energy
  • Continuous repetition of the remedy will depend on
  • The state of the patient
  • The type of pathology

External stresses deserve a special mention. They are almost always the cause and the continuance of chronic disease. External stress can be –

  • Removed (best outcome for patient)
  • Adjusted
  • Put up with
  • Where external stress continues, it is reasonable to expect that the remedy will hold for lesser periods than when it has been removed.

Areas that result in energy being drained from the patient include-

  • Worry
  • Tension and stress
  • Overwork
  • Poor nutrition
  • Too much or too little exercise
  • Negative self-belief
  • Emotional trauma
  • Physical trauma including childbirth and accidents

It is important to remember that our remedies are energy medicines – they are not people themselves and although we have painted caricatures to help us learn materia medica, these pictures are not always true of every patient that needs that remedy. The remedy is a set of potentials waiting to replace an existing state of energy imbalance using the law of similars as an agent for readjustment of those symptoms. The remedy cannot change the soul or the essential personality of the patient. A remedy can bring out the best personality potential of a patient. When a patient has returned to balance after the correct remedy, the increase in energy will often allow for more positive behaviours and insights.

Expect different pace of improvement between structural and functional symptoms.

We regard the removal of symptoms as a “quelling” of symptoms or bringing the patient back into balance. A remedy that is homeopathic to the patient and their symptoms, gives them the extra energy required to lower/remove those symptoms.

  • Increased energy = health
  • Energy down = signs and symptoms

Humans are homeostatic beings and designed to react to stress. Pathology is the result of continued stress either imposed externally or from within. There are no guarantees in life that this will not occur again in the future. It is up to the practitioner to explain to the patient that it is possible that these symptoms or other symptoms may occur again in time, despite the best treatment given previously. Good health is a process of continual management.

9 – MAINTAINING HEALTH

  • Use miasmatic Homeopathic remedies as required
  • Eat natural, whole foods with focus on lower carbs including artificial and natural sugars
  • Exercise regularly in fresh air
  • Keep company with people you love and like
  • Choose an activity that you find joyful – indulge in it regularly