The End Of Homeopathy?
Dr Ben Goldacre hits the jackpot, moving from a column on Saturday's Guardian to a cover story in Friday's Guardian. It's a very balanced and reasoned argument against homoeopathy for people who don't understand what a fair trial is, how placebo works, or just how stupid homoeopaths sound when they try and explain it. It's down to permeated nano-particles, apparently.
I recommend reading the article to anyone who thinks that homoeopathy is better than placebo or agrees that homoeopathy has a place in treating AIDS and malaria. Or people like me, who like watching homoeopathy get slapped down. For the medical geeks out there, there is the companion article in the Lancet too.
20 years ago no one believed in the chinese medicine and now the west keeps on adapting it's cures.
Both traditional and modern medicine have their place IMHO, and both have their share of skilled and clueless practitioners.
Jani: From your comment, I see that you didn't read the article or understand the scientific method. You don't understand how medicine works, but luckily doctors do. Homoeopaths don't understand and can't explain how homoeopathy works, and in medicial trials it is no better than placebo.
This includes traditional remedies which have been proven useful, and also mineral water.
The former should be recognised as the source for much of what modern medicine has to offer, the later should be humiliated on the town square.
BUT
They should never be confused, it's degrading to one, and gives the other support it doesn't deserve.
Don't confuse traditional medicine and homoeopathy!
Also, whatever I think of his main point, the author's use of statistical terms is pretty slack, which is worrying - neither article has a statistician co-author. In my limited experience, I've already seen too many medics and biologists mislead themselves with misunderstood statistics. I'm not sure that is happening here, but I'm not sure this article adds anything to current knowledge besides some heat. I'm disappointed you linked it - this blog is usually better than that. ;-)
And of course I could easily come up with a bunch of made-up arcane prescriptions and sell them on the same grounds. It saddens me that public opinion seems to be in favor of the current double standard with treatments: So called "alternative remedies" have to undergo much less stringent tests than the pills manufactured by Evil Pharma, Inc. Even though the risks can be higher due to the much lower accuracy of dosages.
Ross, thanks for your voice of reason on the loony intarwebs.
http://arstechnica.com/articles/culture/the-pseudoscience-behind-homeopathy.ars