Lothian
should be banned
To expand on my comment above. Any Medical interventions can have a side effects and carry a risk. From the article some 7800 people were given 6 injections, that is nearly 47,000 injections. This appears to have prevented 19 people from developing HIV.
We do need to weigh up the benefits against the risk. Were this to stop a common cold, it would not be worth it. HIV is far more serious but the cost benefit analysis still needs to be done.
In respect of Ben Goldacre’s percentage point .
A treatment could give a relative 80% reduction in the chance of developing an illness.
If the chances of getting that disease are 1 in 2 then the treatment will reduce this to 1 in 10 and certainly looks worth it. The chance of getting the disease has dropped from 50% to 10% a 40% reduction in absolute terms.
If the chances of getting the disease are 1 in a million then a 80% reduction will make it 1 in 5 million. You have to go to a few decimal places of a single percentage before noticing a difference. In those circumstances people may chose to take their chances.
It is easier for people to decide by reviewing the absolute than the relative risks.
We do need to weigh up the benefits against the risk. Were this to stop a common cold, it would not be worth it. HIV is far more serious but the cost benefit analysis still needs to be done.
In respect of Ben Goldacre’s percentage point .
A treatment could give a relative 80% reduction in the chance of developing an illness.
If the chances of getting that disease are 1 in 2 then the treatment will reduce this to 1 in 10 and certainly looks worth it. The chance of getting the disease has dropped from 50% to 10% a 40% reduction in absolute terms.
If the chances of getting the disease are 1 in a million then a 80% reduction will make it 1 in 5 million. You have to go to a few decimal places of a single percentage before noticing a difference. In those circumstances people may chose to take their chances.
It is easier for people to decide by reviewing the absolute than the relative risks.