Baby and Bathwater
saizai,
Please allow me to join the debate late. I believe that I may have a fresh outlook on the task you present for us here. I hope that I don't throw out the baby with the bathwater.
I have a bit of a reputation around this Forum of proposing radical changes and my own challenges, replete with cash incentives. Let's all work together to build the best protocol.
Your goal is to show that prayer influences health, even at great distances. I'd suggest that you hypothesize that prayer even improves health.
First, I suggest that you've selected your populations poorly. Selecting those suffering from disease and those using the Internet and those willing to volunteer greatly limits your ability to use randomization to avoid confounding effects. The power of your tests will suffer accordingly. Why not select healthy individuals from a controlled population, such as a prison, a church, or a university?
Second, I suggest that you've selected your outcomes poorly. Selecting pain, for example, is highly subjective and readily confounded. As a terminal cancer patient (not quite end-stage, thank you.), I can tell you that my pain varies based on whether a friend called today, the amount sunshine, how long my palliative drugs have been in the refrigerator (shelf life issue), how long it's been since my chemotherapy (the chemo has a palliative benefit too.), and a host of other items. You must accept one of: 1) a very large sample size (Don't! It's too expensive.), 2) stratification (Don't. It's too complicated.), or 3) a new outcome that you can readily and accurately measure (Do this!) Why not select blood pressure (Give everyone an electronic BP cuff.)? How about mental acuity (Have everyone take a web-base skill test.)?
Third, I suggest that you're not blind enough. Your studies include a great deal of cognitive science. You know about how we deceive and trick even ourselves into believing what we want. You, indeed absolutely no one, should know that assignments until the end of the trials. You must not be assigning individuals based on Round 1 results into groups in Round 2. Totally blind your studies. It's the only way to go, really! I know it may seems hard, but we can help. It's really easier than you think. (Randi, by the way has a "magical" way of "divining" such blinded studies that are just "amazing"!)
Fourth, I urge you to go with a A-B study to reduce the confounding effects. Assign half of the receivers to Group A, half to Group B. Assign the providers to A. Run one trial. Measure all receivers. Assign the providers to B (tell them that A have been cured, killed, died, forgotten, converted to Pastamania, or something not so cruel or funny.) Run one trial. Measure all receivers. Now ANOVA. If you assume (and you really can't, but hey there's still the randomization) that no confoundering variables were more likely to occur during one trial than the other, you've blocked the confounding effects.
To tie a bow around it:
1) You and I design a simple web-based intelligence test.
2) You and I design a simple survey that asks the questions (first name, age, gender, eye color, nose length, whatever, and verified email address) the answers to which (except for the email address) we'd like to provide to the providers, and a second survey to get email addresses of providers.
3) I drive 50 miles north on a Sunday morning and visit a number of churches, posting fliers asking them to visit a certain website to register for the study as receivers.
4) I drive 50 miles south on the next Sunday morning and visit a number of churches posting fliers asking them to visit another certain website to register for the study as providers.
5) The computer programs (I write them and you review them) implement our protocol, sending the correct emails to the receivers and providers at the appropriate times and after two months sends both of us an email of the resultant data. I provide all needed software, hardware, and domain services. I maintain complete lockdown of the machines, the code, and the data. You do not get to know the website names or towns or churchs. Indeed, we do not get any data, except for a daily "heartbeat" report listing number of registrations, tests, emails sent, and days remaining in the current step) until after the test's conclusion.
6) If the test shows a significant positive effect of prayer, then you win $1000 (of my own money) and my support in applying for MDC. If not, you agree to cease all requests for donations on any website forever more regarding any paranormal claim, especially the healing effects of prayer.
By the way, I am tempted to offer $5 to anyone who improves by better than average in test 2 over test 1 or test 3 over test 2. Perhaps it should be $100 to the church with the person with the best improvement during a trial and $100 to the church of the provider associated with the best provided-for improvement. I'm still considering the ramifications, such as collecting information about where to send checks, and the effect on my checking account.
I believe that you'll do us both a favor by taking some serious time to really consider this proposal. I believe that you won't find more support anywhere than in the text above.
Determinedly,
Gulliver