Archive for the ‘In the news’ Category

Swine flu statistics

Friday, July 31st, 2009

A full-page question and answer article this week (Protect yourself from swine flu) in popular UK magazine Closer announced that ‘hundreds of thousands of cases of the disease have now been diagnosed in the UK’.  Expert advice (credited to Dr Christian Jessen from Channel 4’s Embarrassing Illnesses tv show) claims that swine flu carries a 1-4 per cent chance of death, adding that the disease spreads quickly, but that antiviral medication Tamiflu ‘is effective in helping most people recover’.

I don’t know how much maths doctors are expected to master, but I’m guessing it’s less than homeopaths (and that’s from someone for whom maths class was hell).

If ‘hundreds of thousands of cases’ of swine flu have been diagnosed in the UK, and there have been ‘over 30 deaths in the UK’, surely that’s nowhere near the ‘1-4 per cent risk of death’ stated in Dr Jessen’s article?

According to the BBC news website today, one in 150 people in the UK have now contracted swine flu (so that’s 1:150 in a population of 60million, which I calculate as 400,000 UK swine flu cases), and there have been 27 UK deaths.  That’s a 27 in 400,000 risk, or a 1 in 14,814 chance of death, by my reckoning (I’ve been poring over a hot calculator and chewing my pencil stub).

You have more chance of dying from a sunny day (risk of death from hot weather is 1 in 13,729).

The same BBC news website states that ‘officials say more than half of children taking Tamiflu suffer side-effects such as nausea and insomnia’.

Yet it’s been reported that drug giant GlaxoSmithKline’s profits have risen 10 per cent since the virus was identified and GSK chief executive Andrew Witty was reported as admitting the swine flu virus crisis would be a ’significant financial event for the company’.

Go figure.

Your access to natural health products may be at risk!

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

If you live in the UK and you want to be able to continue to use natural health products such as vitamins and herbs, please sign this UK petition:  http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/Vitamins/

Signing it takes only a minute, and is very important if you want to continue to use natural health supplements.

Please pass this link on to interested friends, family and colleagues - the more signatures, the better!

Lancet study slating homeopathy was flawed, says Professor

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

Stephen Gordon, the General Secretary of the European Council for Classical Homeopathy, asks that the following information be made known:

“Two new studies conclude that a review which claimed that homeopathy is just a placebo, published in The Lancet, was seriously flawed.

George Lewith, Professor of Health Research at Southampton University comments: ‘The review gave no indication of which trials were analysed nor of the various vital assumptions made about the data. This is not usual scientific practice. If we presume that homeopathy works for some conditions but not others, or change the definition of a ‘larger trial’, the conclusions change. This indicates a fundamental weakness in the conclusions: they are NOT reliable.’

The background to the ongoing debate is as follows:

In August 2005, The Lancet published an editorial entitled ‘The End of Homeopathy’, prompted by a review comparing clinical trials of homeopathy with trials of conventional medicine. The claim that homeopathic medicines are just placebo was based on 6 clinical trials of conventional medicine and 8 studies of homeopathy but did not reveal the identity of these trials. The review was criticised for its opacity as it gave no indication of which trials were analysed and the various assumptions made about the data.

Sufficient detail to enable a reconstruction was eventually published and two recently published scientific papers based on such a reconstruction challenge the Lancet review, showing that:

  • Analysis of all high quality trials of homeopathy yields a positive conclusion.
  • The 8 larger higher quality trials of homeopathy were all for different conditions; if homeopathy works for some of these but not others the result changes, implying that it is not placebo.
  • The comparison with conventional medicine was meaningless.
  • Doubts remain about the opaque, unpublished criteria used in the review, including the definition of ‘higher quality’.

The Lancet review, led by Prof Matthias Egger of the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine at the University of Berne, started with 110 matched clinical trials of homeopathy and conventional medicine, reduced these to ‘higher quality trials’ and then to 8 and 6 respectively ‘larger higher quality trials’. Based on these 14 studies the review concluded that there is ‘weak evidence for a specific effect of homoeopathic remedies, but strong evidence for specific effects of conventional interventions’.

There are a limited number of homeopathic studies so it is quite possible to interpret these data selectively and unfavourably, which is what appears to have been done in the Lancet paper. If we assume that homeopathy does not work for just one condition (Arnica for post-exercise muscle stiffness), or alter the definition of ‘larger trial’, the results are positive. The comparison with conventional medicine was meaningless: the original 110 trials were matched, but matching was lost after they were reduced to 8 and 6. But the quality of homeopathic trials was better than conventional trials.

This reconstruction casts serious doubts on the review, showing that it was based on a series of hidden judgments unfavourable to homeopathy. An open assessment of the current evidence suggests that homeopathy is probably effective for a number of conditions including allergies, upper respiratory tract infections and ‘flu, but more research is desperately needed.

Prof Egger has declined to comment on these findings.

References

Lüdtke R, Rutten ALB. The conclusions on the effectiveness of homeopathy highly depend on the set of analyzed trials. J Clin Epidemiol 2008. doi:10.1016/j.jclinepi.2008.06.015

Rutten ALB, Stolper CF. The 2005 meta-analysis of homeopathy: the importance of post-publication data. Homeopathy 2008. doi:10.1016/j.homp.2008.09.008.”

No safe medicines, says watchdog chief

Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Professor Kent Woods, the chief executive of the drugs industry watchdog, is reported as saying “it is important to realise there aren’t any safe medicines”. Read the full story here.

Homeopathy’s OK by me, say stars

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Find out what the stars have to say about homeopathy (link to OK magazine article about David & Victoria Beckham, Nelly Furtado, Nadia Sawalha and Catherine Zeta Jones - all of whom it seems use homeopathy) .

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