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Complete Repertory 2016 by Roger van Zandvoort
This is the latest and largest repertory from Roger van Zandvoort, released April 2016.
A lot of work went into this yearly release of the Complete Repertory version 2016.
After years of mostly concentrating on remedy additions from cured cases, this time once
more an original materia medica and repertory, Carl Friedrich Trinks’ Handbuch der
homoöpatischen Arzneimittellehre from 1847, has been added, a primary Materia Medica
much like Hahnemann’s Materia Medica Pura, only with more remedy provings and
toxicology.
A very nice detail in Trink’s opus is the fact that all remedies have been graded using
Bönninghausen’s grade system (of course), resulting in lowest degree, plain type, and
second degree, italics, additions. These additions, combined with already available info
from practice (cured cases) will often up the grading from lowest or second degree (i.e.
provings/toxicology or single cured case-additions without proving/toxicology) to third or
even fourth degree additions (provings/toxicology AND cured) which will make analyses
with the programs that include this information, i.e. include Complete Repertory 2016 more
refined.
Next to Trinks’ work, around 760 more articles from the Homoeopathic Recorder and to a
lesser degree from the British Homoeopathic Journal have been read and remedies from
these have been added into the Complete Repertory.
As a reaction on a promise made during a repertory-workshop with George Vithoulkas
around 2000 in Alonnisos for those working on Repertory, in which it was concluded that
much more cured case-info should be added into the existing repertory material, for the
Complete Repertory nearly 3000 sources have been consulted since then to update the
repertory with more cured material.
Repertory |
Kent ++ |
CR 2011 |
CR 2012 |
CR 2014 |
CR 2016 |
Synthesis 9.1 |
Number of rubrics with remedies |
64 230 |
185 127 |
187 739 |
190 164 |
202 721 |
139 714 |
Number of remedies |
624 |
2 488 |
2498 |
2509 |
2 519 |
2 373 |
Number of remedies that occur in at least 100 rubrics |
362 |
1298 |
1335 |
1345 |
1402 |
unknown |
Number of remedies that occur in at least 1000 rubrics |
157 |
505 |
521 |
534 |
563 |
unknown |
Number of remedy occurences |
503 145 |
2 247 311 |
2 308 011 |
2 384 717 |
2 573 414 |
1 066 987 |
Grade 1 |
338 879 |
1 561 126 |
1 614 919 |
1 586 219 |
1 656 300 |
816 612 |
Grade 2 |
129 362 |
** 83 549 |
** 85 524 |
** 103 864 |
** 198 798 |
201 295 |
Grade 3 |
34 904 |
413 207 |
416 383 |
499 087 |
519 312 |
48 610 |
Grade 4 |
0 |
189 429 |
191 185 |
195 547 |
199 004 |
470 |
Number of additions clinically verified (grade 2 + 3 + 4) |
164 266 |
686 185 |
693 092 |
798 498 |
917 114 |
250 375 |
Clinically verified, % of total |
32,65% |
30,53% |
30,03% |
33,48% |
35,63% |
23,47% |
Number of references and cross-references |
0 |
263 323 |
266 846 |
268 376 |
282 653 |
28 744 |
Average number of remedies per rubric |
7,83 |
12,14 |
12,29 |
12,54 |
12,69 |
7,64 |
Compensated repertory model |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
** In CR 2016, grade four is grade three in the other repertories, grade three in CR 2016 is grade two in the other repertories.
Grade two in CR 2016 is non-existent in the other repertories (Boenninghausen’s grade two means mentioned by two or more provers but no clinical confirmation)
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