Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

New paper claims your living room causes diabetes

#1
C C Offline
https://www.science20.com/hank_campbell/...tes-251678

EXCERPTS: In the modern world of chemistry, where we can detect parts per billion, trillion, and even quadrillion, we can detect anything we want in anything else. In the modern world of epidemiology, we can also link anything to anything we want, as Harvard School of Public Health does often with its claims that some food or trace chemical is either curing or causing cancer when grant application season rolls around.

And if you use mice, it's truly open season on science the public can trust. [...] Like statistical correlation, mouse studies are to be placed firmly over the in "exploratory" section of science. They may be interesting, they may be worth a follow-up, but they have no human relevance until science shows it. That is why all of the ~200 COVID-19 vaccine candidates will not get FDA emergency authorization based on mouse studies or epidemiology. Those two things can only exclude a positive or negative effect in humans, they cannot show either; biology and chemistry still rule.

Here is how poorly animal studies translate to anything clinical - under 10 percent. And for epidemiology, it's even less relevant, unless you are in a trade group claiming red meat either causes or prevents cancer, both of which have been shown statistically.

Yet if you want to get media attention from corporate journalists, epidemiology and mouse studies are the way to go. You just make some bizarre claim, like that your living room is causing diabetes, and you will get attention. (You can show statistical significance for nearly any speculation. It's easy. I can show, with statistical significance, that coin flips are prejudiced against heads. Or tails. You just need enough data and a desire to only see the result you want.)

A recent paper in Scientific Reports does just that. They "suggest" - because they did no science to show it - that polybrominated diphenyl ethers (a combination of PBDEs in DE-71) in furniture are causing diabetes in humans. Not type 1 diabetes, obviously, but rather the lifestyle form of type 2 diabetes - the one that almost overwhelmingly occurs among obese people. History is not on their side. Brominated flame retardants like PBDEs were used by the ancient Romans to keep their expensive siege towers from being set on fire. We have no evidence any soldiers thought their siege towers were causing obesity. England even issued the first patent for a chemical flame retardant in 1735 and in nearly 300 years no surge in type 2 diabetes happened due to it.

[...] the world of the 1990s was a lot more scientifically naïve than today. We were not yet jaded by $2 billion in lawyer-driven environmental groups that have to create new problems - PM2.5, formaldehyde, BPA, you name it and someone calls it an "endocrine disruptor" - to get us worried about or they are out of business. ... By 2004, PBDEs were out of furniture again for the same reason BPA stopped being used in Manwich cans a few years ago; science is irrelevant when chemophobia in media overrules it. “EPA has not concluded that PBDEs pose an unreasonable risk to human health or the environment,” EPA wrote, but the writing was also on the marketing wall. Anti-science activists had won and reason had to go... (MORE - details)
Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Ideology stomps all over chemistry in a new paper C C 0 84 Jan 17, 2023 03:38 AM
Last Post: C C
  Don’t fall for the snake oil claims of ‘structured water’. C C 3 111 Aug 6, 2022 10:31 PM
Last Post: RainbowUnicorn
  Even "good racism" can't base special needs on mere appearances & ethnic claims? C C 0 84 Mar 18, 2022 07:26 PM
Last Post: C C
  The problem with the pampered generations' claims of “lived experience” C C 0 96 Jul 21, 2021 09:52 PM
Last Post: C C
  Parasitic whiteness (privilege): New paper may not be a hoax + Sex in sports C C 1 154 Jun 12, 2021 06:36 PM
Last Post: Syne
  Study claims lockdowns may have no clear benefit over voluntary measures C C 5 219 Jan 16, 2021 09:48 PM
Last Post: Syne
  3rd of seniors prescribed harmful drugs + FactChecking Biden science claims on energy C C 1 170 Oct 24, 2020 10:58 AM
Last Post: Syne
  New paper points out flaw in Rubber Hand Illusion: tough questions for psychology. C C 0 158 Apr 12, 2020 02:50 AM
Last Post: C C
  Cherry-picking approach that claims Roundup is deadly also shows it's a cancer cure C C 0 184 May 22, 2019 06:05 PM
Last Post: C C
  In California, Coffee Causes Cancer & Lawyers Collect the Fee C C 1 327 Feb 1, 2018 03:24 AM
Last Post: Syne



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)