Normal view

  • ✇El País in English
  • Homeopathy is a placebo and could ‘pose a risk’ to health, Spanish authorities confirm Pablo Linde
    The results provided by homeopathy “do not outperform the placebo effect,” there is no scientific evidence that it is an effective treatment, and using it instead of other therapies can “pose a risk” to patients’ health. These conclusions, which the scientific community has maintained for decades, have now been confirmed by a report published on Tuesday by the Spanish Agency of Medicines and Medical Products (AEMPS), a state agency attached to the Ministry of Health.Seguir leyendo
     

Homeopathy is a placebo and could ‘pose a risk’ to health, Spanish authorities confirm

21 April 2026 at 15:00

The results provided by homeopathy “do not outperform the placebo effect,” there is no scientific evidence that it is an effective treatment, and using it instead of other therapies can “pose a risk” to patients’ health. These conclusions, which the scientific community has maintained for decades, have now been confirmed by a report published on Tuesday by the Spanish Agency of Medicines and Medical Products (AEMPS), a state agency attached to the Ministry of Health.

Seguir leyendo

© INMA FLORES

Homeopathic products at a pharmacy in Madrid.
  • ✇El País in English
  • The new trial over Diego Maradona’s death: Homicide, negligence, or an inevitable outcome? Javier Lorca
    The resemblance is reminiscent of televised replays of Diego Maradona’s feats, when viewers tried to make sense of the feat they had just witnessed, now free from the dizziness and excitement that cloud the moment, the fleeting present. A public trial, which began last Tuesday, is attempting to determine whether Maradona, the Argentine football idol, died as a result of the neglect and abandonment he suffered at the hands of the healthcare professionals who were supposed to be caring for him on
     

The new trial over Diego Maradona’s death: Homicide, negligence, or an inevitable outcome?

20 April 2026 at 14:15

The resemblance is reminiscent of televised replays of Diego Maradona’s feats, when viewers tried to make sense of the feat they had just witnessed, now free from the dizziness and excitement that cloud the moment, the fleeting present. A public trial, which began last Tuesday, is attempting to determine whether Maradona, the Argentine football idol, died as a result of the neglect and abandonment he suffered at the hands of the healthcare professionals who were supposed to be caring for him on November 25, 2020. The new trial seems like a carbon copy of the proceedings that began a year earlier, also in the courts of San Isidro, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires. The accused and the accusers, the victim and the crime, are the same. But that’s where the similarities end. The narrative of those involved is different.

Seguir leyendo

© Paul Bereswill (Getty Images)

Diego Maradona in Mexico City, June 29, 1986.
❌