Inventing the randomized double-blind trial: the
Nuremberg salt test of 1835
MStolberg
J R Soc Med 2006;99:642–643
Additional material for this article is available from the James Lind
Library website [http://www.jameslindlibrary.org], where this
paper was previously published.
Control groups, randomization, blinding, placebos and
related methods designed to eliminate bias have become
widely recognized as key features of efforts to identify more
effective and safer treatments. As others have shown,
1,2
many of these methods were first developed and applied in
the context of controversies between mainstream medicine
and new, ‘alternative’ types of medicine. A very early
example of randomization and double blinding was an
evaluation of homeopathy conducted in Nuremberg in 1835
by a ‘society of truth-loving men.’
3–5
At the time, homeopathy had garnered considerable
support among the upper classes in the then Kingdom of
Bavaria. In Nuremberg, one of Bavaria’s largest and most
affluent cities, Karl Preu and Johann Jacob Reuter had
treated some of the most prominent families with
homeopathy, including members of the high aristocracy.
In 1834, annoyed by homeopathy’s rising popularity,
Friedrich Wilhelm von Hoven, the city’s highest ranking
public health official and head of the local hospitals,
published a devastating critique of homeopathy under the
pseudonym ‘E_.F_.Wahrhold’,
6
which he had used
previously in a way that allowed readers to identify the
true author. Von Hoven accused homeopathy of lacking any
scientific foundation. He suggested that homeopathic drugs
were not real medicines at all and alleged homeopathic
cures were either due to dietetic regimens and the healing
powers of nature, or showed the power of belief. He called
for an objective, comparative assessment by impartial
experts. If, as he expected, homeopathic treatment proved
ineffective, the government would need to take drastic
measures to protect the lives of deceived patients.
In 1835, by which time Karl Preu had died, Johann
Jacob Reuter was the sole remaining physician homeopath
in the city. He reacted to Wahrhold/von Hoven’s attack
with an ardent defence of homeopathy
7
and pointed out that
even children, lunatics and animals had been successfully
cured. Based on Hahnemann’s assertions, he challenged
Wahrhold/von Hoven to try the effects of a C30 dilution of
salt on himself. The odds were ten to one, he claimed, that
his opponent would experience some extraordinary
sensations as a result—and these were nothing compared
to the much stronger effects on the sick.
Perhaps surprisingly, Reuter’s opponents took up his
challenge. Various (allopathic) pharmacists and physicians
conducted individual tests, following Reuter’s indications.
Then it was decided to stage a larger-scale trial. It remains
uncertain who took the initiative for this, but it was
probably von Hoven and the circle of physicians around
him. They were supported by George Lo
¨
hner, the owner
and editor of the daily Allgemeine Zeitung von und fu
¨
r Bayern,
who later compiled the trial report. Lo
¨
hner had no medical
training but his newspaper had repeatedly carried polemical
attacks against homeopathy.
Following a widely publicized invitation to anyone who
was interested, more than 120 citizens met in a local
tavern. The minimum number needed to proceed had been
fixed at 50. The design of the proposed trial was explained
in detail. In front of everyone, 100 vials were numbered,
thoroughly shuffled and then split up at random into two
lots of 50. One lot was filled with distilled snow water, the
other with ordinary salt in a homeopathic C30-dilution of
distilled snow water, prepared just as Reuter had
demanded: a grain of salt was dissolved in 100 drops of
distilled snow water and the resulting solution was diluted
29 times at a ratio of 1 to 100. Great care was taken to
avoid any contamination with allopathic drugs. The two
pharmacists in charge had taken two days off before the
experiment. They had taken a bath and they used new
weighing scales which had not even come close to an
allopathic pharmacy.
A list indicating the numbers of the vials with and
without the salt dilution, respectively, was made and sealed.
The vials were then passed on to a ‘commission’ which
distributed 47 of the vials to those among the audience who
had declared their willingness to participate (the report
speaks of 48 vials but this included an unnumbered vial with
salt dilution given to a physician by the name of Lochner).
The participants’ names and the number of the vial that each
had received were written in a second list. Seven more
FROM THE JAMES LIND LIBRARY
642
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE Volume 99 December 2006
Institut fu¨ r Geschichte der Medizin, Oberer Neubergweg 10a, 97074 Wu¨ rzburg,
Germany
E-mail: michael.stolberg@mail.uni-wuerzburg.de