What does this video actually claim?
Dr. Chetan Gupta's Instagram post promotes his "predictive homeopathic clinic" for treating various male sexual health issues. The hashtags suggest he's offering homeopathic treatments for nocturnal emissions (wet dreams), erectile dysfunction, low testosterone, premature ejaculation, and general sexual health problems.
The post doesn't make explicit treatment claims in the caption itself. Instead, it's essentially a clinic advertisement that uses medical terminology and hashtags to attract men seeking help for sexual health issues. The "predictive homeopathy" branding implies some kind of advanced or specialized approach.
With 112.4K views, this type of content clearly lands with men looking for alternatives to conventional medical treatment. But the question is whether homeopathy can actually address these serious medical conditions.
Does homeopathy work for these conditions?
No credible scientific evidence supports homeopathy for treating erectile dysfunction, low testosterone, or other sexual health problems. The 2015 Australian National Health and Medical Research Council reviewed 176 studies and found "no reliable evidence that homeopathy is effective for any health condition."
For erectile dysfunction specifically, the International Journal of Impotence Research (Jang et al., 2008) found that PDE5 inhibitors like sildenafil have success rates of 60-85%, while no published trials demonstrate homeopathic efficacy. Low testosterone requires hormone replacement therapy with actual testosterone, not highly diluted substances.
The British Medical Journal's 2005 meta-analysis by Shang et al. examined 110 homeopathy trials and concluded that effects disappeared when study quality improved. For serious conditions like hypogonadism, delaying effective treatment can worsen symptoms and impact quality of life.
What's problematic about this approach?
Marketing homeopathy for sexual health issues can delay men from getting actual medical help. Erectile dysfunction often signals cardiovascular disease, diabetes, or other serious conditions requiring proper diagnosis.
The term "predictive homeopathy" appears to be marketing language without scientific basis. Classical homeopathy already claims to individualize treatments, so this seems like branding rather than a legitimate medical advancement.
Low testosterone (hypogonadism) requires blood testing and evidence-based treatment. The Testosterone Trials (Snyder et al., NEJM, 2016) showed that testosterone therapy can improve sexual function in men with confirmed low testosterone levels below 275 ng/dL.
Nocturnal emissions are completely normal for most men and don't require treatment at all. Promoting medical intervention for normal physiological functions creates unnecessary anxiety and medicalization.
What should men actually know?
Sexual health problems often have treatable medical causes that require proper evaluation. Erectile dysfunction affects 40% of men over 40, and effective treatments include PDE5 inhibitors, testosterone replacement when indicated, and addressing underlying health issues.
For genuine low testosterone, endocrinologists can prescribe testosterone cypionate, enanthate, gels, or other proven formulations. The key is confirming low levels with multiple blood tests and ruling out underlying causes.
Premature ejaculation responds well to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, topical anesthetics, or behavioral techniques. The International Society for Sexual Medicine provides evidence-based guidelines for all these conditions.
Men experiencing persistent sexual health problems should consult urologists or endocrinologists rather than seeking unproven alternatives. Early intervention with effective treatments typically produces better outcomes than delaying with ineffective approaches.