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Archive for the ‘Medicine/Health’ Category

Anti-nonscience

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

Cherry picking

“We have actually touched the Borderland where Matter and Force seem to merge into one another, the shadowy realm between the Known and Unknown … I venture to think that the greatest scientific problems of the future will find their solution in this Borderland, and even beyond; here, it seems to me, lie Ultimate Realities, subtle, far-reaching, wonderful.”
Sir William Crookes

Poor Professor David Colquhoun. He’s so caught up in his personal identification with what ‘science’ means to him that he’s driven to ever greater efforts in his attempts to excommunicate subjects like homeopathy from not just his own world view but everybody else’s as well.

He’s not alone, of course. But the more he and those like him rant and rave about what does or does not deserve to be given the status of card-carrying member of the ‘science’ club, the more they reveal the emotional foundation of their position, and the less the argument has anything to do with real science. His latest effort is an article in March 22nd’s Nature magazine entitled ‘Science degrees without the science‘ in which he lambasts British universities for offering science degrees in complementary medicine, judging this as “anti-science”.

Of course, the universities are just drawing their boundaries wide of Prof Colquhoun’s personal comfort zone, which has very little to do with the fundamental nature of rigorous scientific enquiry. (See the essay Unscientific Attachment for more on this subject.) The paradoxical thing about Colquhoun’s increasingly high profile position on the subject is that findings from disciplines likely well within the boundaries of his own definition of ‘science’ have already proved his thinking to be hopelessly flawed. (Not to mention that Jungian psychology also shows it to be highly self-reflective).

Many of the arguments put forward by complementary medicine’s detractors owe more to 19th century scientific reasoning than they do to the 21st century, and where they do make a valid observation, they usually fail to see that exactly the same mechanisms are at work in their own field.

80 years after Werner Heisenberg demonstrated that events do not possess an absolute deterministic predictability independent of the people who are ‘observing’ them, medical science continues to worship the gold standard of the randomised double blind clinically controlled trial for all the world as if it’s based on solid foundations instead of an invalid assumption and the type of linear logic that’s more appropriate to understanding machines than living systems. While being able to readily perceive the fundamental flaws in RCT methodology when applied to ‘unacceptable’ subjects, the same individuals appear totally blind to the same flaws operating within the bounds of what they view as ‘acceptable’. Trumpeting that ‘belief’ plays a large part in complementary medicine’s effectiveness, they miss the fact that exactly the same process is operating in conventional medicine, and with far greater strength at that. Instead of taking the intelligent scientific view that such phenomena need to be properly investigated, tested and incorporated into our understanding of the processes at work, they simply let the evidence feed their unthinking prejudice.

“The opposite of a fact is falsehood, but the opposite of one profound truth may very well be another profound truth”
Niels Bohr

What’s more, that tired old chestnut that dilutions which contain no trace of material substance cannot possibly produce any result

” … relies on a quaint old idea from the nineteenth century that the ONLY way that the property of water can be affected or changed is by incorporating foreign molecules. This is the Avogadro-limit high-school level chemistry argument. To a materials scientist this notion is absurd, since the fundamental paradigm of materials-science is that the structure-property relationship is the basic determinant of everything. It is a fact that the structure of water and therefore the informational content of water can be altered in infinite ways” ( Prof Rustum Roy PhD, Evan Pugh Professor of the Solid State Emeritus; Professor of Science, Technology and Society Emeritus; Professor of Geochemistry Emeritus, Pennsylvania State University)

Landmark achievements in scientific enquiry owe most to individuals who have been able to step outside the prejudices of their conditioning and perceive natural processes in a fresh light without attachment to underlying assumptions. If anyone is “anti-science”, it’s those who cling noisily and somewhat desperately to the sacred cows populating their maps of the world, behaving exactly as one would expect from people who have projected their own individual sense of identity onto their chosen occupation and who experience some kind of personal affront when faced with a challenge to what they perceive as that occupation’s fixed consensus view of the world. (In reality, no such consensus exists and what is generally held to be ‘true’ by any majority of the individuals involved is constantly changing and evolving.) People like Prof Colquhoun seem to feel that the solution to the problem is not to rise to the challenge but to try to bully everyone else into ignoring it or rejecting it in the hopes that it’ll go away. Unfortunately, life just isn’t like that and truth has a way of coming to light regardless.

Interviewed by Nature magazine for an accompanying news item on the subject of university degrees in complementary medicine, Ben Goldacre, a London-based medical doctor, journalist and frequent critic of homeopathy, says. “I can only imagine that they teach that it’s OK to cherry-pick evidence. That’s totally unacceptable.” Indeed it is. But it seems that both Dr Goldacre and Prof Colquhoun are no mean cherry-pickers themselves. Didn’t their mothers teach them to check themselves in the mirror before venturing out into the big bad world?

“All great truths begin as blasphemies.”
George Bernard Shaw



Closure threat

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.”
Mahatma Gandhi

The Royal London Homeopathic Hospital is being threatened with closure. This appears to have very little to do with any falls in underlying patient demand or levels of satisfaction with the services offered by the hospital and rather more to do with politically-motivated agendas to undermine complementary therapies and restrict patient choice.

More details from Dr Peter Fisher, Clinical Director of the RLHH (and homeopath to the Queen) can be found here.

If you’d like to register your support for the hospital, there is a petition online at Number 10 Downing Street’s website … “We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to honour Parliament’s committment to patient choice by preserving the Royal London Homeopathic Hospital and the service it provides as an integral part of the NHS.” This petition can only be signed by UK residents. If you’re from overseas, you can join the campaign to save the RLHH by contacting them directly. The address is available at the end of this article.



Bird flew

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

“We have failed to grasp that when we do not protest and demand an end to atrocities committed in our name, something trips in the deep-brain cynicism of the governing psyche, which takes heart from the passivity it finds and devises more ways to control and enforce its will.”
Henry Porter

Whoever had the brilliant idea to attach the customary annual Asian flu scare to birds has certainly seen it take wings and soar. Now it seems it’s got legs as well. Since its first appearance in Autumn 2005, the fantastical idea that humanity is about to succumb to some super-flu virus which is about to jump species from birds to humans and wipe out up to 150 million of us has not only grabbed the public imagination, but government coffers as well. In figures announced 2 days ago, Roche Pharmaceuticals, subsidiary of Swiss-based multinational Roche Holding AG and manufacturers of the anti-viral drug Tamiflu, has seen net income soar to £3.7billion in 2006, a rise of 34% on 2005′s figures.

To put this in perspective, Roche’s net income was greater than the entire gross domestic product – that is, the value of all final goods and services produced within a nation in a given year – of the bottom 73 nations of the World Bank’s 183-nation rankings in 2005. (The parent company’s revenues exceeded the GDP of 119 of those 183 nations.) When you consider that a substantial proportion of this was on the strength of a mere fantasy that has no basis in current reality, only an unproven theoretical possibility of coming into being, and probably no better odds of happening than any of the other disaster scenarios we regularly entertain our imaginations with, the sheer lunacy and obscenity of our collective gullibility in the face of these druggernauts becomes all too painfully plain (not to mention the hypocrisy of our societal attitudes to illegal drugs cartels).

For a grounded and thorough examination of the avian flu question, see the article Avian flu – the ecology of an epidemic from the archives of the Ecologist magazine, which is no less relevant today than it was when written in December 2005. And for a depressingly plausible reason for the US administration’s enthusiastic participation in the flu promotion circus, see Dr Joseph Mercola‘s comments.

Who would believe so much money could be made from selling illusory “protection” against an illusory threat? To anyone familiar with astrology, this has all the hallmarks of the Neptune archetype. It seemed worth checking out.

The astrological chart for the event (below) is extraordinary. It fell within an extended period during which conflicting forces in the shape of fixed squares, crosses, yods, and other configurations were severely disrupting many people’s equilibrium. The original announcement of the putative “epidemic” was made by Dr David Nabarro at the UN on September 29 2005. Note how retrograde Neptune, the planet of illusion and deceit (and also drugs and addiction), is the focus of the chart. Neptune was in loose opposition to both Saturn, giving inner fears outer structure and form, and the Moon, allowing illusion to play on unconscious fears and emotions and people’s sense of security. (In a chart such as this, the Moon also represents the people as a collective.) With the Moon and Saturn in Leo, there’s an element of control and domination in these aspects. Neptune was also in loose trine to Jupiter, magnifying its effects, exact to Mercury, maximising its effective communication, and again loosely to the Sun, giving it power. The Libran colouration of these 3 planets lent apparent balance and respectability, as did the aura of scientific detachment attaching to this most Aquarian of illusions.

Of themselves, each of these aspects had the potential to manifest in a positive as much as a negative light, but squaring Neptune, Mars (stationing before turning retrograde 2 days later) opposed Venus, each in the sign of their detriment, creating heightened tension and distortion fueled by big ambitions (Mars in Taurus) and excessive desires (Venus in Scorpio) and much potential for manipulation. Neptune septile Pluto invited greater ungrounded irrationality on a global scale than at any time since it last happened during the 1930s, which saw the rise of Fascism and other totalitarian regimes. Pluto inconjunct Mars indicated an obsessive, domineering and aggressive attitude towards work matters, and Pluto in trine to the Moon a self-assured confidence and inner security, coupled with great insight into the inner unconcious motivations of people, magnified by the presence of Jupiter in sextile to each.

It hardly seems necessary to go into any more detail, but when we do, there are additional levels of emphasis and illumination. Neptune was in direct opposition to Dark Moon Lilith, a theoretical point representing the negative unconscious, which was conjunct the asteroid Nemesis, the Achilles’ heel or source of the problem. Mars, representing the will and activating principle of the chart, was conjunct the asteroid Pandora, which scarcely needs an explanation. Saturn was in exact opposition to within one minute of the asteroid Arachne representing intrigue, entanglement and entrapment.

Most eloquent of all is the Sabian symbol for Neptune’s degree (15° Aquarius). “A big businessman at his desk.”

Astrological chart for bird flu announcement

An annular solar eclipse occured 3 days later at 11° Libra, trining Neptune. In her book, Predictive Astrology: The Eagle and the Lark, Bernadette Brady notes that this particular eclipse is one with “immense power, anger and force … huge obstacles will suddenly and easily clear”. Since solar eclipses are meant to take effect for as many years as minutes the eclipse lasts, the influence of this one is due to hang around until early 2010. Looking at this chart, it’s really no wonder this illusion has become so pervasive and so powerful. It’s almost tempting to wonder if Roche Pharmaceuticals employ an in-house astrologer …

“Ambition is a gilded misery, a secret poison, a hidden plague, the engineer of deceit, the mother of hypocrisy, the parent of envy, the original of vices, the moth of holiness, the blinder of hearts, turning medicines into maladies, and remedies into diseases.”
Thomas Brooks



Desperate Dan

Saturday, February 3rd, 2007

Vitamins

“An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody sees it.”
Mahatma Gandhi

On January 16, the New York Times published an essay by author Dan Hurley entitled “Dietary Supplements and Safety: Some Disquieting Data.” The essay makes for unsettling reading.

Hurley writes:

“Since 1983, the American Association of Poison Control Centers has kept statistics on reports of poisonings for every type of substance, including dietary supplements. That first year, there were 14,006 reports related to the use of vitamins, minerals, essential oils – which are not classified as a dietary supplement but are widely sold in supplement stores for a variety of uses – and homeopathic remedies. Herbs were not categorized that year, because they were rarely used then.

“By 2005, the number had grown ninefold: 125,595 incidents were reported related to vitamins, minerals, essential oils, herbs and other supplements. In all, over the 23-year span, the association – a national organization of state and local poison centers – has received more than 1.6 million reports of adverse reactions to such products, including 251,799 that were serious enough to require hospitalization. From 1983 to 2004 there were 230 reported deaths from supplements, with the yearly numbers rising from 4 in 1994, the year the supplement bill passed, to a record 27 in 2005.”

He goes on to elaborate, breaking down the statistics according to the number of reported adverse reactions, hospitalisations and deaths linked to vitamins, minerals, herbs, homeopathic remedies, etc. “Homeopathic products, often marketed as being safe because the doses are very low, were linked to 7,049 reactions, including 564 hospitalizations and 2 deaths.”

To any complementary medical practitioner and user, and anyone who purchases and uses dietary supplements, this article is worrying. But not necessarily for the obvious reasons.

At the end of the essay we read “Dan Hurley is the author of the new book ”Natural Causes: Death, Lies and Politics in America’s Vitamin and Herbal Supplement Industry” (Broadway Books), from which this essay is adapted.” In his research for the book, Hurley (a regular contributor to the “Science Times” section of the New York Times with 15 years’ experience as a medical reporter for publications ranging from Medical Tribune to Family Circle and Psychology Today), claims to have spent nearly two years reviewing studies and court cases, speaking with politicians and public-policy experts and interviewing physicians, pharmacists, nurses, toxicologists, epidemiologists and public health officials, as well as victims and their families. His analysis of 23 years of data from the US Poison Control Centers was what was extracted from the book to form the basis of the NYT article.

However Michael Levin, a healthcare consultant who has served in executive positions in both pharmaceutical and dietary supplement businesses, was suspicious of the figures. Levin immediately researched Hurley’s claims and promptly wrote to the New York Times. His letter has not been published but the full text of it is available here on John Weeks’ The Integrator Blog.

He writes:

“Mr. Hurley’s essay regarding the safety of vitamins and dietary supplements was, indeed, disquieting. He referred to “a national database accumulating strong evidence that some supplements carry risks of injury and death, and that children may be particularly vulnerable.”

“In examining that database (“2005 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers’ National Poisoning and Exposure Database”, Lai, et al, Clinical Toxicology, 44:803-932, 2006), it became clear that Mr. Hurley’s “disquieting data” is wholly misleading and utterly unfounded. His bias is reflected in the fact that he did not disclose to his readers that the statistics he cited included suicide attempts, multiple drug use and events related to children’s misadventures in the household medicine cabinet.

Hurley, in his NYT essay, attempts to pre-empt the obvious riposte from the dietary supplement industry by arguing:

“Advocates of the products correctly point out that the poison centers’ figures do not prove a causal link between a product and a reaction and that, in any case, far more people are injured and killed by drugs. Painkillers alone were associated with 283,253 adverse reactions in 2005, according to the poison centers, more than twice as many as with supplements. But only 3.5 percent of those reactions occurred when people took the prescribed amount of painkiller; most were from overdoses, either accidental or intentional. The same was true of asthma drugs (3.6 percent of reactions were associated with the prescribed dose) and cough and cold drugs (3.1 percent).

but apparently fails to apply the same logic to his own analysis of the data on supplements and alternative treatments. Levin writes:

“Regarding deaths from all causes: Dr. Lai, et. al. reports “of the 1,261 human poisoning fatalities reported, 89.6% of adolescent deaths and 76.6% of adult deaths (older than 19 years) were intentional” (page 811). Clearly, the vast majority of deaths were deliberate acts which have absolutely no reflection whatsoever on the safety of the products involved when they are used as directed or prescribed.”

and goes on to break the data down further, showing in each instance the extent of Hurley’s manipulation of the figures.

While it would be ludicrous to suggest that alternative medical techniques and treatments and dietary supplements are incapable of causing adverse reactions, or that those participating in the dietary supplement industry and alternative medical practice are all as pure as the driven snow – every area of life, without exception, has its ethical and unethical representatives and practices – sensationalist articles such as Hurley’s do nothing to advance the cause of evidence-based medicine. The New York Times (not to mention The Lancet), once regarded as a publication of integrity and reliability, has clearly been co-opted into promoting agendas which have nothing whatsoever to do with reliable, robust science.

Yet the attempts of the medical mainstream to discredit alternative and complementary treatments are beginning to look more and more desperate. It’s heartening to see that for all the extensive resources being thrown at these exercises, the truth still manages to find its way out somehow.

“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.”
Søren Kierkegaard



Time for a Change of Heart?

Saturday, January 6th, 2007

“I’m saying that we should trust our intuition. I believe that the principles of universal evolution are revealed to us through intuition. And I think that if we combine our intuition and our reason, we can respond in an evolutionary sound way to our problems.”
Jonas Salk

Having spent a fair bit of my spare time in the last 2 years gathering and analysing statistics on the correlation between CVD mortality and nitrate fertiliser use, I’ve now been able to add more supporting data to my June 2005 article on the subject.

This year I’m taking a step back from practice to spend more time on this as preliminary findings indicate that the hypothesis is well worth pursuing.



DISCLAIMER
Thanks to the current insanity revolving around homeopathy in this country, in both media and blogosphere, it's become necessary to insult your intelligence by explicitly drawing your attention to the obvious fact that any views or advice in this weblog/website are, unless stated otherwise, the opinions of the author alone and should not be taken as a substitute for medical advice or treatment. If you choose to take anything from here that might be construed as advice, you do so entirely under your own recognisance and responsibility.

smeddum.net - Blog: Confessions of a Serial Prover. Weblog on homeopathy, health and related subjects by homeopathic practitioner Wendy Howard