Mojo
Mostly harmless
So, what is it with Lionel Milgrom?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/********-Harry-G-Frankfurt/dp/0691122946?
So, what is it with Lionel Milgrom?
Okay, I've exaggerated him just a little bitThis is more incorrect than the statement in the abstract, and it is wrong in that:
- there has not been an award of substantial damages;
- there has not been an award of any damages;
- there has not been the award of any legal remedy;
- there has not been a judgment of the court...
- there has not even been a full trial of the case...
- a full trial has not even been listed...
- the case is still at the preliminary stage...
- [the case] is adjourned pending the outcome of Simon Singh's appeal of the ruling on meaning.
Here are his definitions:2. What is subluxation?
Subluxation in the chiropractic sense is a spinal focus of manifestation of stress. In simplistic terms: its a painful or locked-up area of the spine. But you can find many areas of the spine that are painful. The chiropractor sytematically finds the original points of focus for correction via the chiropractic adjustment. Usually areas of compensation do not solve the problem long term. Anybody can crack a joint or treat pain areas. Chiropractors focus on areas clinically proven to get closer to the cause. These are subluxated vertebrae.
Lionel Milgrom comments:
CAM, Free Speech, and the British Legal System: Overstepping the Mark?
"Overstepping the mark" indeed.
This isn't the first time that Milgrom has overstepped the mark regaridng Eady's preliminary ruling: Here he is in the BMJ's rapid responses claiming that "the judge agreed [Singh's article] was libellous".
Analysis of Milgrom's article from Jack of Kent, Gimpy and Dr Aust.
Two articles in this issue deal with disinformation being spread about alternative and complementary medicine in the United Kingdom. These are: Milgrom's CAM, Free Speech, and the British Legal System: Overstepping the Mark? (pp. 1135-1138) and ...

Oh boy, I've just spotted this accompanying editorial: Disinformation on Both Sides of the Atlantic: A Patient's View:
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That's a pretty thorough conflating of two completely different issues: trying to provide effective healthcare for all Americans and trying to ensure ineffective healthcare is allowed to masquerade as real medicine.
I think Ernst was actually being rather kind in calling homeopaths liars. He should have called them all ********ters and mind****ers.
A suggestion. Write to the editor, complaining about the extremely poor standard of scholarship of Milgrom's article, copying to the publisher. Ask why peer review did not even check the simplest of facts. The more the merrier......
In answer to your e-mail comment sent via our website, our editor says:
We have been given to understand that Dr. Singh was given leave to appeal the decisions against him on 14th October 2009, after this issue of The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine had gone to press, at which time, we understand that everything in Dr. Milgrom's article was factually correct. We will be adding a footnote to the article in the online Journal to alert the readership about the appeal.
The article claimed that there was an award of substantial damages yet they "understand that everything in the article was factually correct at the time". They really are without a clue.According to this comment on Jack of Kent's blog, the publishers have already responded to a similar comment:
That link gives me:
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