Captain Caveman wrote:
Trousers wrote:
I can't recommend the book Bad Science by Ben Goldacre enough.
It explains a lot of why people believe in the efficacy of basically non-effective remedies through the strength of the placebo effect (i.e it's so powerful that it has been shown that if a Doctor prescribing a placebo believes in it then the patient can show alleviated symptoms) and how regression to the mean explains the symptoms going away but it being attributed to whatever remedy has been taken.
I firmly believe that there is no scientific basis for it to work but it does work because people believe it will work.
That's all well and good Trousers, but as I and others have stated, the genesis of a great many 'modern science' medicines is rooted in alternative medicine practices. Even now, the research into the efficacy of herbal plant remedies of even deeply primitive civilsations goes unabated, often with some success, so I am to understand.
Thus, to write off
all alternative medicine, in its complete entirely as total bunkum/no more effective than placebo is, frankly, both arrogant and wrong.
(Still, I'd expect nothing less from your goodself, you hippy. OHO. :D <--- Joke :) )
* cracks knuckles *
The genesis of the
entirety of mainstream, evidence based, modern scientific medicine comes from barbaric, preposterous insane medical practices. Blood letting, surgery, Leaches, The 4 humors and on and on.
One of the reasons Homeopathy and the like were so successful, was because whilst they did nothing to help you, 'proper' medical treatments by the doctors in the beginning stages of modern medicine actively harmed you. Sugar versus bloodletting and so on. Medicine for any illness that regresses to the mean (i.e. you'll get better on your own with enough time) will lead ingredients that do nothing being selected over ones that do something. As is easier to do harm to a person rather than benefit them.
But, this isn't an issue of alternative versus modern medicine. This is an issue of effective medicines versus non-effective ones.
The only the thing at debate is how you deduce what an efficacious medicine is. Cavey is suggesting that the word of friends and anecdotes is sufficient evidence for him to try and by proxy recommend
active medical ingredients. Even for the cure for cancer.
I do not think that is safe. I think that is potentially dangerous for the individual and definitely dangerous for society.
Evidence based judgements in health are the best way to ensure medicine is both effective, safe for use and crucially amplify and maximise the effects of the medicine.
The
culture of alternative medicine undermines this. It is against science and progress, proponents would agree, and hold that as a badge of honour, but it isn't "Big Pharma" they are against, but the very idea of having interest in how their cure works. In this case it's how apricot pips cure cancer, they may spout some science here and there to back themselves up, but they have little desire to to maximise and amplify that mechanism. And no desire to prove themselves wrong.
In Bad Science, Goldacre lists the top 5 or so papers in medical journals. By 'top' I mean references and cited. The ones scientists pay attention to. And they are all critical of a drug, method or practice. The scientific methods discards everything it can and celebrates the process of realising it was wrong.
Alternative medicine discards nothing.
For every well meaning apricot stone for cancer they'll be another well meaning recommendation of
#top" class="postlink">lemon juice and sodium chlorite* for Crohn's disease. For every willow bark they'll be homeopaths recommending against malaria drugs and for sugar pills.
There will always be a market for short cutting the scientific method by trying something untested off an unqualified but well meaning quack and occasionally it may work. But it may just as well hinder, or harm. When you explore these alternatvie medicines you have only yourself to judge their safety and efficiency.
And whilst you may believe yourself qualified I know that I am not.
*
which react together to form bleach