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Banerji Protocols
The Banerji Protocols is the name adopted by Drs. Prasanta and Pratip Banerji, of Kolkata, India, for their standardized system of using homeopathic ("ultra-dilute") remedies to answer the needs of patients with specific diagnoses of disease. They adopted the name upon the advice of Dr. Greg Evans of the National Cancer Institute, USA, when, during a conference sponsored by the NCI in 2000, homeopathic practitioners complained that the Banerjis' standardized approach could not properly be called homeopathy. At this time, the Banerjis, though openly admitting their close association with homeopathic medicine, acknowledge that their protocols reject at least five "Principles of Homeopathy" to which classical homeopaths demand adherence: Moreover, rather than prescribing remedies for individuals, based on the practitioner’s perception of the individual’s unique characteristics (a diagnostic process that, on average, takes close to two hours in adults ), the Banerjis seek to prescribe medicines (or remedies) for specific diseases, a process that, they say, enables doctors in their clinics to serve an average of 100 or more patients a day or, for an average doctor to "easily treat 50-70 patients a day." Moreover, because they prescribe specific medicines in specific potencies and in fixed dosage patterns, their protocols are replicable and amenable to clinical trials and scientific study.
 * 1) The Law of Similia;
 * 2) The Law of Simplex;
 * 3) The Law of Minimum;
 * 4) The Theory of Chronic Disease; and,
 * 5) The Theory of Vital Force.