Wednesday, 27 April 2022

Lies, Damned Lies, and Medical Science

The following article from 2010 is extremely interesting.

Lies, Damned Lies, and Medical Science.

To quote some of the more salient parts:


[Dr John Ioannidis is] what’s known as a meta-researcher, and he’s become one of the world’s foremost experts on the credibility of medical research. He and his team have shown, again and again, and in many different ways, that much of what biomedical researchers conclude in published studies—conclusions that doctors keep in mind when they prescribe antibiotics or blood-pressure medication, or when they advise us to consume more fiber or less meat, or when they recommend surgery for heart disease or back pain—is misleading, exaggerated, and often flat-out wrong. He charges that as much as 90 percent of the published medical information that doctors rely on is flawed. His work has been widely accepted by the medical community; it has been published in the field’s top journals, where it is heavily cited; and he is a big draw at conferences.

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In poring over medical journals, [Ioannidi] was struck by how many findings of all types were refuted by later findings. Of course, medical-science “never minds” are hardly secret. And they sometimes make headlines, as when in recent years large studies or growing consensuses of researchers concluded that mammograms, colonoscopies, and PSA tests are far less useful cancer-detection tools than we had been told; or when widely prescribed antidepressants such as Prozac, Zoloft, and Paxil were revealed to be no more effective than a placebo for most cases of depression; or when we learned that staying out of the sun entirely can actually increase cancer risks; or when we were told that the advice to drink lots of water during intense exercise was potentially fatal; or when, last April, we were informed that taking fish oil, exercising, and doing puzzles doesn’t really help fend off Alzheimer’s disease, as long claimed. Peer-reviewed studies have come to opposite conclusions on whether using cell phones can cause brain cancer, whether sleeping more than eight hours a night is healthful or dangerous, whether taking aspirin every day is more likely to save your life or cut it short, and whether routine angioplasty works better than pills to unclog heart arteries.But beyond the headlines, Ioannidis was shocked at the range and reach of the reversals he was seeing in everyday medical research. “Randomized controlled trials,” which compare how one group responds to a treatment against how an identical group fares without the treatment, had long been considered nearly unshakable evidence, but they, too, ended up being wrong some of the time. “I realized even our gold-standard research had a lot of problems,” he says. Baffled, he started looking for the specific ways in which studies were going wrong. And before long he discovered that the range of errors being committed was astonishing: from what questions researchers posed, to how they set up the studies, to which patients they recruited for the studies, to which measurements they took, to how they analyzed the data, to how they presented their results, to how particular studies came to be published in medical journals.

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Imagine, though, that five different research teams test an interesting theory that’s making the rounds, and four of the groups correctly prove the idea false, while the one less cautious group incorrectly “proves” it true through some combination of error, fluke, and clever selection of data. Guess whose findings your doctor ends up reading about in the journal, and you end up hearing about on the evening news?

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When a five-year study of 10,000 people finds that those who take more vitamin X are less likely to get cancer Y, you’d think you have pretty good reason to take more vitamin X, and physicians routinely pass these recommendations on to patients. But these studies often sharply conflict with one another. Studies have gone back and forth on the cancer-preventing powers of vitamins A, D, and E; on the heart-health benefits of eating fat and carbs; and even on the question of whether being overweight is more likely to extend or shorten your life. How should we choose among these dueling, high-profile nutritional findings? Ioannidis suggests a simple approach: ignore them all [emphasis added].

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On the relatively rare occasions when a study does go on long enough to track mortality, the findings frequently upend those of the shorter studies. (For example, though the vast majority of studies of overweight individuals link excess weight to ill health, the longest of them haven’t convincingly shown that overweight people are likely to die sooner, and a few of them have seemingly demonstrated that moderately overweight people are likely to live longer.

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nutritional studies aren’t the worst. Drug studies have the added corruptive force of financial conflict of interest. The exciting links between genes and various diseases and traits that are relentlessly hyped in the press for heralding miraculous around-the-corner treatments for everything from colon cancer to schizophrenia have in the past proved so vulnerable to error and distortion, Ioannidis has found, that in some cases you’d have done about as well by throwing darts at a chart of the genome.

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The ultimate protection against research error and bias is supposed to come from the way scientists constantly retest each other’s results—except they don’t. Only the most prominent findings are likely to be put to the test, because there’s likely to be publication payoff in firming up the proof, or contradicting it.

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Doctors may notice that their patients don’t seem to fare as well with certain treatments as the literature would lead them to expect, but the field is appropriately conditioned to subjugate such anecdotal evidence to study findings.Yet much, perhaps even most, of what doctors do has never been formally put to the test in credible studies, given that the need to do so became obvious to the field only in the 1990s, leaving it playing catch-up with a century or more of non-evidence-based medicine, and contributing to Ioannidis’s shockingly high estimate of the degree to which medical knowledge is flawed. That we’re not routinely made seriously ill by this shortfall, he argues, is due largely to the fact that most medical interventions and advice don’t address life-and-death situations, but rather aim to leave us marginally healthier or less unhealthy, so we usually neither gain nor risk all that much.

Tuesday, 19 April 2022

A Viking Poo

 Just read this article about a Viking Poo.  Picture below.


Little did the Viking realise when he was squatting down that people would gaze at his poo in rapt attention a 1000 years hence. Just as we don't consider that possibility.

Sunday, 17 April 2022

Advice on getting a girlfriend

Just read this: I’m fit and intelligent, but can’t get a date. Should I give up?

. .well at least the initial letter, I haven't bothered with reading the response from the agony aunt.

He says: 

I put a lot of effort into online dating, but the final straw was sending quality personal messages to 47 different women over six months and receiving nil positive replies.

In my experience I never got any responses for articulate thoughtful initial messages. You have to put "Yo!" or whatever (or, at least, something short). And linking to my blog (my other one) virtually assured that they would either suddenly cease communicating with me, or I got some excuse. I'm not kidding...

Having said that, I did meet someone before from a dating site.

Coming across as super-intelligent is going to put them off. As is being thick. They want someone they can relate to, of about equal intelligence to them.   

My conclusion with my experience is you're most likely to succeed when you don't try too hard and not really too fussed if they don't respond again. When you're flippant and "random" in your responses. When you perplex and intrigue them.

Oh yes, and I cannot stress how important is that you are smiling in your profile picture!  It is absolutely essential!  




Tuesday, 12 April 2022

I'm finding Resident Evil 4 boring

I've played resident evil 1 and 2, and the remakes of RE1, RE2 and RE3 (I started playing the original RE3 a couple of months ago, but ran out of ink ribbons so gave up about a third? of the way through the game).  See my blog posts here, here and here.  But I've never played RE 0, RE 4, RE 5, RE 6, RE 7, or RE 8 (village).

Anyway, everyone continually raves on about how great RE 4 is.  I even read someone who says he's been playing it about once a year ever since it was released in 2004!

The controls are abysmal.  I cannot "strafe" i.e move sidewards.,  The look around control seems very limited.  It's all very dark.  I don't think I can move when pointing a gun.  The first village was way too dark and I couldn't systematically look around everywhere because of this. Talk about a blind playthrough!

So I've just given up on it after that first village.

I find most computer games boring, although some of the old ones from 20 years ago are worth playing (but not RE 4).

I wonder what RE 5 and RE 6 are like?  RE 7, (which like RE 4 is also highly recommended) looks boring from watching someone play the first hour

Friday, 1 April 2022

Rishi Sunak (the UK chancellor) and his excuses

Rishi Sunak, regarding the UK's current cost of living crisis, has been reported as saying.

[T]he toughest part of this job is not being able to do everything that people would like you to do because we’re already borrowing quite a large amount of money, and I don’t think borrowing lots more would be sensible.

Why does he imagine he needs to borrow?  There's plenty of money out there.

The top 1% of the UK's population has the same wealth as the bottom 60% combined (i.e most of us).

The top 10% have almost half of all wealth (something like 47%).

In stark contrast, the bottom 50% of the UK's population have about 7% of all wealth (so the top 50% have 93% of all wealth).

I therefore simply have no sympathy for this "we have no money" line or references to "magic money trees".  This is an emergency. He is morally obligated to make the distribution of wealth ever so slightly more equitable so that people don't go hungry or cold (and sometimes both).

The myths and traditions of death

 An interesting Guardian article : It is worth reminding ourselves that the vast majority of our ancestors saw the world in a very different...