Case Taking and Analysis Using the Sensation Method
By Robert Gramlich
Thu, Nov 01, 2007
An example of case taking and analysis using the Sensation Method of Rajan Sankaran.
I have been studying with Rajan Sankaran for some time and have been practicing his Sensation Method based on the Seven Levels of Experience. This method allows me to follow a patient’s energy pattern, using the Chief Complaint as the window, all the way to the source energy- the source of the remedy itself. The patient is allowed to demonstrate the mechanism of the source and so remedies can be prescribed (even if they are not in the Materia Medica yet) with confidence. I have never had such consistent results before and the job has never been as exciting and enjoyable. It is quite a profound experience for me and for the patient to not stop the inter view until this source pattern has been experienced in the office.
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By Robert Gramlich

Robert Gramlich completed his MD at USC School of Medicine in 1994 and his residency in Family Practice at UCLA in 1997. He began study and practice of homeopathy in 1993 and has a clinic in Los Angeles. Right from the beginning he followed the teachings of Rajan Sankaran and his colleagues and what became known as the Bombay school of homeopathy. He has been to India many times to precept in the clinics and was one of the original participants of what has become the Annual Bombay International Seminar. It was during this seminar series where Dr. Sankaran introduced and developed what is now his standard of practice of the "New System" of the seven levels of experience and the method used to determine the energy of the patient and then matching it to the energy of a simillimum. " After much practice of this method and witnessing many hours of excellent teaching by Dr. Sankaran, I can clearly see remarkable results and the whole experience of case taking and prescribing has become even more interesting and enjoyable. I truly do not know how I would prescribe many of the remedies I am prescribing without it." - Robert Gramlich, Los Angeles, 2004.
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