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In reply to the discussion: re: What is or isn't "Woo", how about Pradaxa? Science or woo? Should it have ever been OKd at all? [View all]mathematic
(1,610 posts)27. That imprecision is a deliberate attempt to discredit the word
By trying to put the woo umbrella over all sorts of things.
Epistemological nihilism (ideas like "we can't know anything for sure"
and conspiratorial thinking are used together to create a false equivalence between evidence based treatments and treatments based on models of reality that are known to be false (like energy meridians, vertebral subluxations, and water memory).
It's incumbent on anybody that gives a damn about public health to reject these false equivalences.
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re: What is or isn't "Woo", how about Pradaxa? Science or woo? Should it have ever been OKd at all? [View all]
Electric Monk
Apr 2014
OP
Clinical efficacy and safety trials not infrequently fail to detect the extent of adverse effects.
hlthe2b
Apr 2014
#4
Woo "attempts to place itself as scientifically, or at least reasonably, supported."
Electric Monk
Apr 2014
#6
Not a single person on this thread supports your broad brush use of that term. Time to rethink...
hlthe2b
Apr 2014
#10
The OP was an open question, for discussion, not an absolute conclusion. nt
Electric Monk
Apr 2014
#11
I agree with you with respect to acupuncture, which has been shown to induce release of endorphins.
hlthe2b
Apr 2014
#36
What you will likewise find is a dearth of research on alternatives to many orthopedic surgeries..
hlthe2b
Apr 2014
#38
Yet another issue, but not reflective of clinical trials failing to detect adverse effects = "woo"
hlthe2b
Apr 2014
#30
Nadine... Even the best of scientific method (clinical trials) can fail to detect serious adverse
hlthe2b
Apr 2014
#12
Chiropracty gets dismissed as woo here, and I don't claim it works by magic. nt
Electric Monk
Apr 2014
#16