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An Open Letter to Alliance Boots

The Boots brand is synonymous with health care in the United Kingdom. Your website speaks proudly about your role as a health care provider and your commitment to deliver exceptional patient care. For many people, you are their first resource for medical advice; and their chosen dispensary for prescription and non-prescription medicines. The British public trusts Boots.

However, in evidence given recently to the Commons Science and Technology Committee, you admitted that you do not believe homeopathy to be efficacious. Despite this, homeopathic products are offered for sale in Boots pharmacies – many of them bearing the trusted Boots brand.

Not only is this two-hundred-year-old pseudo-therapy implausible, it is scientifically absurd. The purported mechanisms of action fly in the face of our understanding of chemistry, physics, pharmacology and physiology. As you are aware, the best and most rigorous scientific research concludes that homeopathy offers no therapeutic effect beyond placebo, but you continue to sell these products regardless because "customers believe they work". Is this the standard you set for yourselves?

The majority of people do not have the time or inclination to check whether the scientific literature supports the claims of efficacy made by products such as homeopathy. We trust brands such as Boots to check the facts for us, to provide sound medical advice that is in our interest and supply only those products with a demonstrable medical benefit.

We don't expect to find products on the shelf at our local pharmacy which do not work.

Not only are these products ineffective, they can also be dangerous. Patients may delay seeking proper medical assistance because they believe homeopathy can treat their condition. Until recently, the Boots website even went so far as to tell patients that "after taking a homeopathic medicine your symptoms may become slightly worse," and that this is "a sign that the body's natural energies have started to counteract the illness". Advice such as this directly encourages patients to wait before seeking real medical attention, even when their condition deteriorates.

We call upon Boots to withdraw all homeopathic products from your shelves. You should not be involved in the sale of ineffective products, because your customers trust you to do what is right for their health. Surely you agree that your commitment to excellent patient care is better served by supplying only those products whose claims can be substantiated by rigorous scientific research? Or do you really believe that Boots should be in the business of selling placebos to the sick and the injured?

The support lent by Boots to this quack therapy contributes directly to its acceptance as a valid medical treatment by the British public, acceptance it does not warrant and support it does not deserve. Please do the right thing, and remove this bogus therapy from your shelves.

Yours sincerely,

The Merseyside Skeptics Society

Joined by

  • Dave Kelly, Bristol GB
  • Howard Kornstein, St Austell GB
  • Andrew Rozanski, Poole, Dorset GB
  • Chris Shaw, Wanaka NZ
  • Richard Thomas, Leeds GB
  • Sam Strachan, Reading GB
  • Dougal Douglass, West Hoathly GB
  • Dr Zoe Nunn BM MRCGP, East Grinstead GB
  • Claire Tochel Ph.D., Edinburgh GB
  • knob, moon GB
  • Robert James Mann, Somerton GB
  • William Callagher, Preston GB
  • Mark Bigelow, Wirral GB
  • Dr Craig McDonald, High Wycombe GB
  • Paul Codd, Brighton GB
  • Jayne Olschak, Manchester GB
  • Robert Qualls, Florence, Alabama US
  • Chris Allen, Paraparaumu NZ
  • Cindy Headley, Brighton GB
  • Liam Quinn, London GB
  • David Johnston, Sydney AU
  • Daniel Wilkes, Dundee GB
  • Malcolm Hulme, Onchan IM
  • Michael Williams, Manchester GB
  • Danny Sichel, Verdun CA
  • ... and 2,396 others...

Sign the letter

To add your signature to the letter, please use the form below.

If you'd like to help give the petition greater prominence, you might want to email the letter to Boots, or even print it and post to Boots directly. You can find their contact details on the Boots website.

Latest Comments

  • Dave Kelly says:

    "Water has memory! And while its memory of a long lost drop of onion juice is infinite, it somehow forgets all the poo it’s had in it!"

    2nd Sep 2010, 00:20
  • Howard Kornstein says:

    I never buy anything from shops selling quack remedies. If Boots don't change their policy re: Homeopathy I will also stop shopping at Boots...

    30th Aug 2010, 08:09
  • knob says:

    yeah, just let boots sell harmful chemicals, drugs, cosmetics, food...... brilliant, they'll make far more cash... wicked...

    24th Aug 2010, 13:38
  • Jayne Olschak says:

    I don't need to go to Boots for my homeopathic *remedies* - they flow out of my tap at home.

    17th Aug 2010, 11:11
  • Robert Qualls says:

    Giving human beings the potential to harm themselves with nonsense is unacceptable.

    13th Aug 2010, 14:22
  • Chris Allen says:

    Spread the word!

    13th Aug 2010, 07:19
  • Cindy Headley says:

    Profit before Peer review? despicable, you should be ashamed, people believe it works because you sell it, not the other way round.

    12th Aug 2010, 17:04
  • Liam Quinn says:

    You can not call yourselves a pharmacy if you are selling something you do not see any medical reason to sell. Please stop selling people ignorance and false hope in something that will never work

    8th Aug 2010, 17:36
  • David Johnston says:

    If companies make profit from fake "remedies" like Homeopathy, they should be prosecuted. Ignorance and superstition is not science. It's not ethical, either.

    8th Aug 2010, 01:42
  • Michael Williams says:

    I will be boycotting boots until they remove all homeopathic "remedies". That they acknowledge it is ineffectual but continue to promote it is sickening.

    6th Aug 2010, 13:45

Comments do not necessarily represent the views of the 10:23 Campaign or Merseyside Skeptics Society.