Ivor the Engineer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 10,642
I think that that medicine is one of the few areas that is subject to persistent and fairly ubiquitous second-guessing.
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I thought you doctors called it 'diagnosis'?
I think that that medicine is one of the few areas that is subject to persistent and fairly ubiquitous second-guessing.
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Apparently notI agree, but aren't we well beyond that point?
I agree. But that doesn't seem to describe the situation here as it's pretty clear people are coming to different conclusions based on less information.
Linda
That's really the problem, isn't it? I think there are fundamental obstacles to overcoming it. Placing undue emphasis on anectodal evidence, making ad hoc ergo propter hoc assumptions, being suspicious of the motives of those in positions of authority, cultivating a taste for juicy gossip -- habits like these do not arise merely out of specific cultural contexts; they arise out of specific features of the human brain. The devil is in the details, but you're just not going to get those details to compete for attention with the antics of Hollywood celebrities, because the details are boring. It's easier to throw mud than it is to catch it.Listening to antivaccinator anti-science folks is not so much of a choice either though. It is they who get the attention of the media with their controversies, stories of cover-ups, and interesting conspiracy theories. They have the limelight. This confuses and scares people.
Really. It seems people cherry pick their information to suit their views, and then say they can disagree with people actually educated on the topic.
Doesn't make them credible. Certainly doesn't make them more informed. Absolutely doesn't make them right.
Your biases have always stood out Beth.
I don't agree (of course, I'm a contrary b**** that loves to disagree with people!) Folks like Ivor and KellyB seem intelligent and well informed on the topic - better than me certainly!
If you can't communicate what you know that they don't well enough to convince them, I don't think it's necessarily due to a lack of knowledge on their part.
Intelligent informed people can disagree on the subject.
It wasn't you that I was comparing them with, but if you find them better informed than you, doesn't that confirm my point? You're not coming to different conclusions on the basis of the same information, but rather less.
I'm not convinced there the problem is a lack of knowledge on the part of those who criticize various aspects of vaccine policy. I certainly agree that there is a barrier related to the difference in attitude when faced with a lack of knowledge, but I see it from the other side. Many medical professionals seem oblivious to their own lack of knowledge regarding the non-medical aspects of medical policy decisions - such as cost-benefit analysis and group decision making processes - and the important role that factors like that can play in making a policy decision.I agree. The barrier seems to me to be a difference in attitude when faced with a lack of knowledge.
Yes, those are different things. And yet another thing is to recognize that different definitions of evidence are appropriate in different situations.It is one thing, Beth, to disagree and provide supporting evidence for one's position. It is another to change the rules of evidence and claim it is just a matter of opinion.
BTW, I find the three of you quite intelligent, Beth, Ivor and kellyb. I have said a number of times you challenge me to think things through that I might have taken for granted.
Note that we've gone from discussing the case to quibbling over basics, like what evidence is.
Is anyone willing to concede that the government is not "covering up" anything, and that this case is NOT about autism?
Well I don't think I could say the government is not covering up anything, but I certainly don't think anything has been covered up with respect to this case, or that it has anything to do with autism.
Apologies of I've missed anything - but I've had a week away and not up with every post on the threads.Someone - can't recall who - has recently posted about the problems of different varieties of an illness (was it hepatitus?) emerging such that the total number of cases doesn't reallly change, only the strains of the disease. That was quite interesting. Not something I'd thought about before, but makes sense.
Anyone reading this would be rather scared that by preventing Hib B, all one was doing was replacing it with even more type A than there was type B to begin with.The incidence of Hib meningitis decreased 69% during the 1-year period after initiation of Hib immunization (from 2.62 to 0.81 cases/100,000 person-years; P<.001). In contrast, the incidence for H. influenzae type a meningitis increased 8-fold.
Therefore, Hib immunization contributed to an increased risk for H. influenzae type a meningitis through selection of circulating H. influenzae type a clones.
As you can see, in red I have added the sections that were deliberately removed from the quote on "InsideVaccines".The incidence of Hib meningitis decreased 69% during the 1-year period after initiation of Hib immunization (from 2.62 to 0.81 cases/100,000 person-years; P<.001). In contrast, the incidence for H. influenzae type a meningitis increased 8-fold (from 0.02 to 0.16 cases/100,000 person-years; P=.008).
Therefore, Hib immunization contributed to an increased risk for H. influenzae type a meningitis through selection of circulating H. influenzae type a clones. The risk attributable to serotype replacement is small in comparison to the large reduction in Hib meningitis due to immunization.
Thank you Ivor. Wanna speculate on why Kent Heckenlively would not agree with us? Let's not forget David Kirby and Deirdre Imus, and Jenny McCarthy, and J. B. Handley, and...
http://leftbrainrightbrain.co.uk/?p=734
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Examine your own reasons for wanting to believe the incredible tales these people dish up. Does there REALLY have to be anything to their claims? Why?