Misreading a Flawed Study
Vaccination against UTIs is a novel idea that holds enormous promise, but clinical trials must be well-designed and carefully analysed.
A collection of 165 posts
Vaccination against UTIs is a novel idea that holds enormous promise, but clinical trials must be well-designed and carefully analysed.
A 2015 study found that black newborns attended by white doctors die at twice the rate of those in the care of black doctors. The study’s refutation last year has not altered the progressive narrative of systemic racism in medicine.
Water fluoridation is a scientifically validated public health measure. Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign to eliminate it is unjustified scaremongering.
Misleading and irresponsible journalism is being used to launder the reputation of RFK Jr.
Denial of “invisible” suffering is bad science and worse ethics.
The politicisation of medicine has had terrible unintended consequences.
The recycling industry—and the world at large—has yet to fully reckon with a bombshell study that dropped last year.
Directing physicians to treat their patients as racial statistics rather than an individuals is a grievous misdirection of their skills.
A landmark report properly emphasises the application of science, not slogans, in establishing treatment protocols for trans-identified children.
Overselling Covid vaccines during the pandemic has backfired and played into the hands of the anti-vaccine movement.
The malaria vaccine may well help reduce deaths, but we should not exaggerate its efficacy.
The importance of cognitive ability to disparities in human health is being overlooked.
A look back on the 2003 BMJ controversy over passive smoking and mortality.
New pharmaceuticals appear to offer a genuine solution to the problem of excess appetite, that uncontrollable urge to eat more than we need to that keeps so many of us fat.
Evidence that clinical decisions are driven by unconscious bias remains conspicuously lacking.