I first read Ioannidis' paper several months ago and enjoyed it immensely. The Atlantic article is also good and I hope that it gets some much-needed conversation energized.
A couple of remarks.
I do not like the title. Ioannidis has shown that most published medical research is wrong and the title of his paper why most published research findings are false is misleading to me. Many of the pitfalls which he describes are specific to the limits of experimenting on human subjects which is not transferable across the entire universe of experimental science. Some of the pitfalls are general and all scientists should pay attention to them; it would have been a smoother rhetorical move to reflect this in his title.
The biggest issues amongst my friends and co-workers are diet and neurological nutritional supplements. My experience is that both of these areas are currently a quicksand swamp where it seems like a study of some sort can be found to support many positions that are in contradiction; the most obvious example is the thing with low fat diets, Atkins diets, paleo diets, and the list is far too long to include them all. I have a book Sports Nutrition published by The American Dietetic Association, which is a compilation from Track people, Football people, Swimming people, &c--there are fifty separate articles. The advice is all over the map. The most interesting thing in that book was the people who said that protein powders are useless. I have my own ideas on diet but I find my social life is less complicated if I keep them to myself.
There is some interesting information and (some complete nonsense) in the book by Doctor Daniel Amen Making a good brain great. It may just be blowback to his enterprising attitude, but Amen attracted enough detractor attention to get himself an entry on the quackwatch web page. He supplies medical journal citations for nearly all the claims in his book. Some of his recommended supplements I had heard of before, such as ginko biloba. Some of his recommended supplements I had never heard of, such as coenzyme Q. Amen takes twenty-five brain supplements daily. It was reading his book, and seeing his claims, and seeing his citations, which convinced me of the Ioannidis claim long before I read the Ioannidis paper. It seems impossible that all of the Amen claims and citations could be valid; it seems far more likely that most of the Amen claims and citations are false.
There is one fascinating item in Amen's book which I will share as an aside. He is big on brain scanning (SPECT is his favorite protocol). He reported one research project where they were going to scan a large random sample of normal people. They preselected with a questionnaire to reject addicts, diagnosed mentally-ill, people with family history of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, people with a memory of severe concussion, &c. Then they winnowed their population again with a preliminary brain scan. Of the first selected set, only ten percent of the people measured normal on their first brain scans and were kept in the study group!
This is an anecdotal data point for the contention that "normal" may be a dubious concept. This may be the single biggest flaw in medical research. People vary widely and they will necessarily vary widely in how they behave under experimental study. The normal distribution may be highly unusual for many practical applications.
If it won't complicate your social life too much here, I'm quite curious about your ideas on diet-- and if you don't want to make them public to LW, could you PM me?
The "textbook stomach" compared to the range of actual stomachs.
I saw that chart a long time ago in an article in a vegetarian magazine. The article said that about 10% of the people who try vegetarianism don't thrive on it. It also said that no one needs more than 4 oz. of meat per day to be healthy.l
A little more about variation-- I've talked with a man who keeps records of his blo...
In a recent article, John Ioannidis describes a very high proportion of medical research as wrong.
Part of the problem is that surprising results get more interest, and surprising results are more likely to be wrong. (I'm not dead certain of this-- if the baseline beliefs are highly likely to be wrong, surprising beliefs become somewhat less likely to be wrong.) Replication is boring. Failure to replicate a bright shiny surprising belief is boring. A tremendous amount isn't checked, and that's before you start considering that a lot of medical research is funded by companies that want to sell something.
Ioannidis' corollaries:
The culture at LW shows a lot of reliance on small inferential psychological studies-- for example that doing a good deed leads to worse behavior later. Please watch out for that.
A smidgen of good news: Failure to Replicate, a website about failures to replicate psychological findings. I think this could be very valuable, and if you agree, please boost the signal by posting it elsewhere.
From Failure to Replicate's author-- A problem with metastudies:
The people I've read who gave advice based on Ioannidis article strongly recommended eating paleo. I don't think this is awful advice in the sense that a number of people seem to actually feel better following it, and I haven't heard of disasters resulting from eating paleo. However, I don't know that it's a general solution to the problems of living with a medical system which does necessary work some of the time, but also is wildly inaccurate and sometimes destructive.
The following advice is has a pure base of anecdote, but at least I've heard a lot of them from people with ongoing medical problems. (Double meaning intended.)
Before you use prescription drugs and/or medical procedures, make sure there's something wrong with you. Keep an eye out for side effects and the results of combined medicines. Check for evidence that whatever you're thinking about doing actually helps. Be careful with statins-- they can cause reversible memory problems and permanent muscle weakness. Choose a doctor who listens to you.
Forum about self-experimentation-- note: even Seth Roberts is apt to oversell his results as applying to everyone.
Link about the failure to replicate site found here.