I looked at the second paper in the list of links
http://deanradin.com/evidence/Leibovici2001.pdf which claims that retroactive prayer had a positive effect on outcomes for hospital patients with blood infections. I couldn't see any flaw in how the group members (prayer/no prayer) were selected and compared for possible complicating factors.
But from the experimental design:
"Three primary outcomes were compared: the number of deaths in hospital, length of stay in hospital from the day of the first positive blood culture to discharge or death, and duration of fever."
How in world do you lump together days until death and days until discharge to get a meaningful measure of outcome? You don't have to be a clinician to see the flaw; the paper fails based on logic right here.
They summarize their results as:
"Remote, retroactive intercessory prayer was associated with a shorter stay in hospital and a shorter duration of fever in patients with a bloodstream infection. Mortality was lower in the intervention group, but the difference between the groups was not significant."
Stated as the conclusion in a sidebar:
"Remote intercessory prayer said for a group of patients is associated with a shorter hospital stay and shorter duration of fever in patients with a bloodstream infection, even when the intervention is performed 4-10 years after the infection"
So are we to conclude that prayer causes those who die to die sooner? That prayers can reach back 4-10 years and change clinical outcomes? Do the prayers climb into little prayer time machines to go back where and when they're needed?
Ed Glosser, their methodology appears to have a fatal flaw and their conclusions contradict QFT. Do you stand by this paper or not? You presented it as evidence.
For those who choose to read the linked paper, at the end of it you'll be treated to a photomicrograph of a clump of cells from a Pap smear that does indeed, as claimed, look very much like the profile of a reindeer. Serious scientists add a totally unrelated example of pareidolia to the ends of their papers?
ferd