Horizon (1964) s39e03 Episode Script

Homeopathy: The Test

The events that would lead to Horizon's million dollar challenge began with Professor Madeleine Ennis, a scientist who may have found the impossible.
I was incredibly surprised and really had great feelings of disbelief.
Her work concerns a type of medicine which defies the laws of science.
If Madeleine Ennis turns out to be right it means that science has missed a huge chunk of something.
She has reawakened one of the most bitter controversies of recent years.
Madeleine Ennis's experiments cannot be right.
I mean it's, they're, they're, preposterous.
I have no explanation for what happened.
However, this is science.
If we knew the answers to the questions we wouldn't bother doing the experiments.
It's all about something you can find on every high street in Britain: homeopathy.
Homeopathy isn't some wacky, fringe belief.
It's over 200 years old and is used by millions of people, including Presidents and pop stars.
It's even credited with helping David Beckham get over his foot injury and the Royals have been keen users since the days of Queen Victoria, but it's also a scientific puzzle.
What makes it so mysterious is its two guiding principles, formulated in the 18th century.
The first principle is that to find a cure you look for a substance that actually causes the symptoms you're suffering from.
It's the principle that like cures like.
For instance in colds and hay fever something we often use is allium cepa which is onion and of course we all know the effects of chopping an onion, you know the sore streaming eyes, streaming nose, sneezing and so we would use allium cepa, onion, for a cold with similar sorts of features.
This theory that like cures like led to thousands of different substances being used, some of them truly bizarre.
In principle you can make a homeopathic remedy out of absolutely anything that's plant.
Deadly nightshade.
Animal.
Snake venom.
Mineral.
Calcium carbonate, which is of course chalk.
Disease product.
Tuberculous gland of a cow.
Radiation.
But then homeopaths found that many of these substances were poisonous, so they started to dilute them.
This led to the extraordinary second principle of homeopathy: the more you dilute a remedy the more effective it becomes, provided it's done in a special way.
The method homeopaths use to this day is called serial dilution.
A drop of the original substance, whether it's snake venom or sulphuric acid, is added to 99 drops of waster or alcohol.
Then the mixture is violently shaken.
Here it's done by machine, but traditionally homeopaths would hit the tube against a hard surface.
Either way, homeopaths believe this is a vital stage.
It somehow transfers the healing powers from the original substance into the water itself.
The result is a mixture diluted 100 times.
That will give you what's called a 1C solution, that's one part in 100.
You then take that 1C solution and dissolve it in another 99 parts and now you end up with a 2C solution.
At 2C the medicine is one part in 10,000, but the homeopaths keep diluting and this is where the conflict with science begins.
At 6C the medicine is diluted a million million times.
This is equivalent to one drop in 20 swimming pools.
Another six dilutions gives you 12C.
This is equivalent to one drop in the Atlantic Ocean, but even this is not enough for most homeopathic medicines.
The typical dilution is 30C, a truly astronomical level of dilution.
One drop in all of the oceans on Earth would be much more concentrated than that.
I would have to go off the planet to make that kind of dilution.
But homeopaths believe that a drop of this ultra dilute solution placed onto sugar pills can cure you.
That's why homeopathy is so controversial because science says that makes no sense whatsoever.
There is a limit to how much we can dilute any substance.
We can only dilute it down to the point that we have one molecule left.
The next dilution we probably won't even have that one molecule.
It's possible to go back and count how many molecules are present in a homeopathic dose and the astonishing answer is absolutely none.
There's less than a chance in a million, less than a chance in a billion that there's a single molecule.
A molecule is the smallest piece of a substance you can have, so for something to have any effect at all conventional science says you need one molecule of it at the very least.
Science has through many, many different experiments shown that when a drug works it's always through the way the molecule interacts with the body and, so the discovery that there's no molecules means absolutely there's no effect.
That's why science and homeopathy have been at war for over 100 years.
The homeopaths say that their remedies have healing powers.
Science says there's nothing but water.
Then one scientist claimed the homeopaths were right after all.
Jacques Benveniste was one of France's science superstars.
He had a string of discoveries to his name and some believed he was on his way to earning a Nobel Prize.
I was considered as, well in French we have a word which says Nobel is nobelisable, which means we can have a Nobel Prize because I started from scratch the whole field of research.
I was the head of a very large team, had a lot of money and so I was a very successful person.
Benveniste was an expert in the field of allergy, in particular he was studying a type of blood cell involved in allergic reactions the basophil.
When basophils come into contact with something you're sensitive to they become activated causing the telltale symptoms.
Benveniste had developed a test that could tell if a person was allergic to something or not.
He added a kind of dye that only turns inactive basophils blue, so by counting the blue cells he could work out whether there had been a reaction, but then something utterly unexpected started to happen.
A technician told me one day I don't understand because I have diluted a substance that is activating basophils to a point where it shouldn't work and it still works.
The researcher had taken the chemical and added water, just like homeopaths do.
The result should have been a solution so dilute it had absolutely no effect and yet, bizarrely, there was a reaction.
The basophils had been activated.
Benveniste knew this shouldn't have been possible.
I remember saying to this, to her, this is water so it cannot work.
Benveniste's team was baffled.
They needed to find out what was going on, so they carried out hundreds of experiments and soon realised that they'd made an extraordinary discovery.
that when a chemical was diluted to homeopathic levels the result was a special kind of water.
It didn't behave like ordinary water, it acted like it still contained the original substance.
It was as if the water was remembering the chemical it had once contained, so Benveniste called the phenomenon the 'memory of water'.
At last here was scientific evidence that homeopathy could work.
Benveniste knew this was a radical suggestion, but there was a way to get his results taken seriously.
He had to get them published in a scientific journal.
A result doesn't exist until it is admitted by the scientific community.
It's like, like being a good opera singer but singing in your bathroom.
That's fine, but it's not Scala, Milan or the Met, Met or the Opera at Paris, what-have-you.
So he sent his work to the most prestigious journal in the world, a journal which for over 100 years has reported the greatest of scientific discoveries: Nature.
Nature is the place that everyone working in science recognises to be a way of getting publicity of the best kind.
Benveniste's research ended up with one of the most powerful figures in science, the then Editor of Nature, Sir John Maddox.
Maddox knew that the memory of water made no scientific sense, but he couldn't just ignore work from such a respected scientist, so he agonised about what to do.
Eventually he reached a decision.
I said OK, we'll publish your paper if you let us come and inspect your lab and he agreed, to my astonishment.
So in June 1988 Benveniste's research appeared in the pages of Nature.
It caused a scientific sensation.
Benveniste became a celebrity.
His memory of water made news across the world.
He seemed to have found the evidence that made homeopathy scientifically credible, but the story wasn't quite over.
Benveniste had agreed to let in a team from Nature.
It was a decision he would live to regret.
Maddox set about assembling his team of investigators and his choices revealed his true suspicions.
First, he chose Walter Stewart, a scientist and fraud-buster, but his next choice would really cause a stir: James Randi.
I looked in my books and I said who are, who is Randi and couldn't find any scientist called Randi.
That was because the amazing Randi isn't a scientist, he's a magician, but he's no ordinary conjuror.
He's also an arch sceptic, a fierce opponent of all things supernatural.
I called John Maddox and I said what, what is this? I mean-- I thought you were coming with, with scientists to discuss science.
But Randi felt he was just the man for the job.
On one occasion he had fooled even experienced scientists with his spoon bending tricks.
Scientists don't always think rationally and in a direct fashion.
They're human beings like anyone else.
They can fool themselves.
So Randi became the second investigator.
Astonishing.
On 4th July 1988 the investigative team arrived in Paris ready for the final showdown.
The first thing we did was to sit round the table in Benveniste's lab.
Benveniste himself struck us all as looking very much like a film star.
I found him to be a charming, very continental gentleman.
He's a great personality.
He was very much in control.
We were quite relaxed because there was no reason why things should not go right.
The first step was for Benveniste and his team to perform their experiment under Randi's watchful gaze.
They had to prepare two sets of tubes containing homeopathic water and ordinary water.
If the homeopathic water was having a real effect different from ordinary water then homeopathy would be vindicated.
As they plotted the results it was clear the experiment had worked.
There were huge peaks coming up out of it and that was very active results, I mean very, very positive results.
The astonishing thing about these results is that they repeated the claim, they demonstrated the claim that a homeopathic dilution, a dilution where there were no molecules, could actually have some sort of an effect.
But Maddox had seen that the experimenters knew which tubes contained the homeopathic water and which contained the ordinary water, so perhaps unconsciously, this might have influenced the results, so he asked them to repeat the experiment.
This time the tubes would be relabelled with a secret code so that no-one knew which tube was which.
We went into a sealed room and we actually taped newspapers over the windows to the room that were accessible to the hall.
We recorded in handwriting which tube was which and we put this into an envelope and sealed it so that nobody could open it or change it.
At this point the investigation took a turn for the surreal as they went to extraordinary lengths to keep the code secret.
Walter and I got up on the stepladder and stuck it to the ceiling of the lab.
There it was taped above us as all of this work went on.
With the codes out of reach the final experiment could begin.
By now Benveniste had lost control of events.
It was a madhouse.
Randi was doing magician tricks.
Yes I was doing perhaps a little bit of sleight-of-hand with an object or something like that, just to lighten the atmosphere.
Soon the analysis was complete.
It was time to break the code to see if the experiment had worked.
Benveniste felt sure that the results would support homeopathy and that he would be vindicated.
That didn't happen.
It was just a total failure.
We said well nothing here is there? The team wrote a report accusing Benveniste of doing bad science and branding the claims for the memory of water a delusion.
Benveniste's scientific reputation was ruined.
For now the memory of water was forgotten.
Science declared homeopathy impossible once more, but strangely that didn't cause homeopathy to disappear.
Despite the scepticism of science millions of people use it If homeopathy is scientific nonsense then why are so many people apparently being cured by it? The answer may lie in the strange and powerful placebo effect.
The placebo effect is one of the most peculiar phenomena in all science.
Doctors have long known that some patients can be cured with pills that contain no active ingredient at all, just plain sugar, what they call the placebo, and they've noticed an even great puzzle: that larger placebo pills work better than small ones, coloured pills work better than white pills.
The key is simply believing that the pill will help you.
This releases the powers in our minds that reduce stress and that alone can improve your health.
Stress hormones make you feel terribly uncomfortable.
The minute you relieve the anxiety, relieve the stress hormones people do feel better, but that's a true physiological effect.
Scientists believe the mere act of taking a homeopathic remedy can make people feel better and homeopathy has other ways of reducing stress.
And is there any particular time of day that you will, you'll, you'll have that feeling? No.
A crucial part of homeopathic care is the consultation.
The stress that you have at work, is that, are those around issues that make you feel quite emotional? No.
The main thing about a homeopathic interview is that we do spend a lot of time talking and listening to the patient.
We would ask questions of how they eat, how they sleep, how much worry and tension there is in their lives, hopefully give them some advice about how to actually ease problems of stress.
I just feel I want to have something more natural.
Yeah So most scientists believe that when homeopathy works it must be because of the placebo effect.
As far as I know it's the only thing that is really guaranteed to be a perfect placebo.
There is no medicine in the medicine at all.
It seems like a perfect explanation, except that homeopathy appears to work when a placebo shouldn't when the patient doesn't even know they're taking a medicine.
All over the country animals are being treated with homeopathic medicines.
Pregnant cows are given dilute cuttlefish ink, sheep receive homeopathic silver to treat eye infections, piglets get sulphur to fatten them up.
A growing number of vets believe it's the medicine of the future, like Mark Elliot who's used homeopathy his whole career, on all sorts of animals.
Primarily it's dogs and horses, but we also treat cats, small rodents, rabbits, guinea pigs, even reptiles, but I have treated an elephant with arthritis and I've heard of colleagues recently who treated giraffes.
It works on any species exactly the same as in the human field.
Mark made it his mission to prove that homeopathy works.
He decided to study horses with Cushing's, a disease caused by cancer.
He treated them all with the same homeopathic remedy.
The results were impressive.
We achieved an overall 80% success rate which is great because that is comparable with, with modern medical drugs.
To Mark this was clear proof that homeopathy can't be the placebo effect.
You can't explain to this animal why the treatment it's being given is going to ben, to benefit it, or how it's potentially going to benefit it and as a result, when you see a positive result in a horse or a dog that to me is the ultimate proof that homeopathy is not placebo, homeopathy works.
But Mark's small trial doesn't convince the sceptics.
They need far more evidence before they'll believe that homeopathic medicines are anything more than plain water.
In science the best evidence there can be is a rigorous trial comparing a medicine against a placebo and in recent years such trials have been done with homeopathy.
David Reilly is a conventionally trained doctor who became intrigued by the claims of the homeopaths.
He wanted to put homeopathy to the test and decided to look at hay fever.
Both homeopathy and conventional medicine use pollen as a treatment for hay fever.
What's different about homeopathy is the dilution.
The single controversial element is that preparing this pollen by the homeopathic method takes it to a point that there's not a single molecule of the starting material present.
I confidently assumed that these diluted medicines were placebos.
David Reilly recruited 35 patients with hayfever.
Half of them were given a homeopathic medicine made from pollen, half were given placebo, just sugar pills.
No one knew which was which.
For four weeks they filled in a diary measuring how bad their symptoms were.
The question was: would there be a difference? To our collective shock a result came out that was very clear those on the active medication had a substantially greater reduction in symptoms than those receiving the placebo medicine.
According to that data the medicine worked.
But to be absolutely rigorous Reilly decided to repeat the study and he got the same result.
Then he went further and tested a different type of allergy.
Again the result was positive, but despite all these studies, most scientists refuse to believe his research.
It became obvious that in certain minds 100 studies, 200 studies would not change the mental framework and so I'm sceptical that if 200 haven't changed it I don't think 400 would change it.
The reason Reilly's research was dismissed was because his conclusion had no scientific explanation.
Sceptics pointed to the glaring problem: there was still no evidence as to how something that was pure water could actually work.
If you design a medication to take advantage of what we know about physiology we're not surprised when it works.
When, when you come up with no explanation at all for how it could work and then claim is works we're not likely to take it seriously.
To convince science, homeopathy had to find a mechanism, something that could explain how homeopathic water could cure you.
That meant proving that water really does have a memory.
Then a scientist appeared to find that proof.
Madeleine Ennis has never had much time for homeopathy.
As a professor of pharmacology she knows its scientifically impossible.
I'm a completely conventional scientist.
I have had no experience of using non - conventional medications and have no intention really of starting to use them.
But at a conference Ennis heard a French scientist present some puzzling results, results that seemed to show that water has a memory.
Many of us were incredibly sceptical about the findings.
We told him that something must have gone wrong in the experiments and that we didn't believe what he had presented.
He replied with a challenge.
I was asked whether, if I really believed my viewpoint, would I test the hypothesis that the data were wrong? Ennis knew that the memory of water breaks the laws the science, but she believed that a scientist should always be willing to investigate new ideas, so the sceptical Ennis ended up testing the central claim of homeopathy.
She performed an experiment almost identical to Benveniste's using the same kind of blood cell.
Then she added a chemical, histamine, which had been diluted down to homeopathic levels.
The crucial question: would it have any effect on the cells? To find out she had to count the cells one by one to see whether they had been affected by the homeopathic water.
The results were mystifying.
the homeopathic water couldn't have had a single molecule of histamine, yet it still had an effect on the cells.
They certainly weren't the results that I would have liked to have seen.
Ennis wondered whether counting by hand had introduced an error, so she repeated the experiment using an automated system to count the cells, and astonishingly, the result was still positive.
I was incredibly surprised and really had great feelings of disbelief, but I know how the experiments were performed and I couldn't see an error in what we had done.
These results seemed to prove that water does have a memory after all.
It's exactly what the homeopaths have been hoping for.
If these results become generally accepted it will revolutionise the view of homeopathy.
Homeopathy will suddenly become this idea that was perhaps born before its time.
It's particularly exciting because it does seem to suggest that Benveniste was correct.
At last here is evidence from a highly respected researcher that homeopathic water has a real biological effect.
The claims of homeopathy might be true after all.
However, the arch sceptic Randi is unimpressed.
There is so many ways that errors are purposeful interference can take place.
As part of his campaign to test bizarre claims Randi has decided to put his money where his mouth is.
On his website is a public promise: to anyone who prove the scientifically impossible Randi will pay $1m.
This is not a cheap theatrical stung.
It's theatrical, yes, but it's a million dollar's worth.
Proving the memory of water would certainly qualify for the million dollars.
To win the prize someone would simply have to repeat Ennis's experiments under controlled conditions, yet no-one has applied.
So Horizon decided to take up Randi's challenge.
We gathered experts from some of Britain's leading scientific institutions to help us repeat Ennis's experiments.
Under the most rigorous of conditions they'll see whether they can find any evidence for the memory of water.
We brought James Randi over from the United States to witness the experiment and we came to the world's most august scientific institution, the Royal Society.
The Vice-President of the Society, Professor John Enderby, agreed to oversee the experiment for us.
but they'll, of course as far as the experimenters are concerned they'll have totally different numbers And with a million dollars at stake James Randi wants to make sure there's no room for error.
keeping the original samples, so I'm very happy with that provision.
The first stage is to prepare the homeopathic dilutions.
We came to the laboratories of University College London where Professor Peter Mobbs agreed to produce them for us.
He's going to make a homeopathic solution of histamine by repeatedly diluting one drop of solution into 99 drops of water.
OK, now I'm transferring the histamine into 9.
9mmls of distilled water and then we'll discard the tip.
For comparison we also need control tubes, tubes that have never had histamine in them.
For these Peter starts with plain water.
In it goes.
This stage dilutes the solutions down to one in 100 - that's 1C.
We now have 10 tubes.
Half are just water diluted with more water, the control tubes, half are histamine diluted in water.
These are all shaken, the crucial homeopathic step.
Now he dilutes each of the tubes again, to 2C.
Then to 3C, all the way to 5C.
The histamine's now been diluted ten thousand million times.
Still a few molecules left in there, but not very many.
Then we asked Professor of Electrical Engineering, Hugh Griffiths, to randomly relabel each of our 10 tubes.
Now only he has the code for which tubes contain the homeopathic dilutions and which tubes contain water.
So there's the record of which is which.
I'm going to encase it in aluminium foil and then seal it in this envelope here.
Next the time-consuming task of taking these solutions down to true homeopathic levels.
UCL scientist Rachel Pearson takes each of the tubes and dilutes them down further to 6C.
That's one drop in 20 swimming pools.
To 12C - a drop in the Atlantic.
Then to 15C - one drop in all the world's oceans.
The tubes have now been diluted one million million million million million times.
Some are taken even further down, to 18C.
Every tube, whether it contains histamine or water, goes through exactly the same procedure.
To guard against any possibility of fraud, Professor Enderby himself recodes every single tube.
The result is 40 tubes none of which should contain any molecules of histamine at all.
Conventional science says they are all identical, but if Madeleine Ennis is right her methods should tell which ones contain the real homeopathic dilutions.
Now we repeat Ennis's procedure.
We take a drop of water from each of the tubes and add a sample of living human cells.
Then it's time for Wayne Turnbull at Guys Hospital, to analyse the cells to see whether the homeopathic water has had any effect.
He'll be using the most sophisticated system available: a flow cytometer.
Loading it up, bringing it up to pressure.
Essentially the technology allows us to take individual cells and push them past a focused laser beam.
A single stream of cells will be pushed along through the nozzle head and come straight down through the machine.
The laser lights will be focussed at each individual cell as it goes past.
Reflected laser light is then being picked up by these electronic detectors here.
By measuring the light reflected off each cell the computer can tell whether they've reacted or not.
This is actually a very fast machine.
I can run up to 100 million cells an hour.
But to be absolutely rigorous we asked a second scientist, Marian Macey at the Royal London Hospital, to perform the analysis in parallel.
Our two labs get to work.
Using a flow cytometer they measure how many of the cells are being activated by the different test solutions.
Some tubes do seem to be having more of an effect than others.
The question is: are they the homeopathic ones? At last the analysis is complete.
We gather all the participants here to the Royal Society to find out the results.
First, everyone confirms that the experiment has been conducted in a rigorous fashion.
I applied my own numbering system to the 5, 5.
4 millimolar solution we eventually did arrive at a protocol that we were happy with.
Then there's the small matter of the million dollars.
James, is the cheque in your pocket ready now? We don't actually carry a cheque around.
It's in the form of negotiable bonds which will be immediately sep, separated from our account and given to whoever should win the prize.
We asked the firm to fax us confirmation that the million dollar prize is there.
OK, now look, I'm going to open this envelope.
Now at last it's time to break the code.
On hand to analyse the results is statistician Martin Bland.
We've divided the tubes into those that did and didn't seem to have an effect in our experiment.
Each tube is either a D for the homeopathic dilutions, or a C, for the plain water controls.
52 and 75 were Cs.
Rachel Pearson identifies the tubes with a C or D.
If the memory of water is real each column should either have mostly Cs or mostly Ds.
This would show that the homeopathic dilutions are having a real effect, different from ordinary water.
There's a hint that the letters are starting to line up.
Column 1 we've got 5 Cs and a D.
Column 3 we've got 4 Cs and a D, so let's press on.
148 and 9, 28 and But as more codes are read out the true result becomes clear: the Cs and Ds are completely mixed up.
The results are just what you'd expect by chance.
A statistical analysis confirms it.
The homeopathic water hasn't had any effect.
There's absolutely no evidence at all to say that there is any difference between the solution that started off as pure water and the solution that started off with the histamine.
What this has convinced me is that water does not have a memory.
So Horizon hasn't won the million dollars.
It's another triumph for James Randi.
His reputation and his money are safe, Homeopathy is back where it started without any credible scientific explanation.
That won't stop millions of people putting their faith in it, but science is confident.
Homeopathy is impossible.

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