What I'm trying to figure out is, how to I determine whether a source I'm looking at is telling the truth? For an example, let's take this page from Metamed: http://www.metamed.com/vital-facts-and-statistics
At first glance, I see some obvious things I ought to consider. It often gives numbers for how many die in hospitals/year, but for my purposes I ought to interpret it in light of how many hospitals are in the US, as well as how many patients are in each hospital. I also notice that as they are trying to promote their site, they probably selected the data that would best serve that purpose.
So where do I go from here? Evaluating each source they reference seems like a waste of time. I do not think it would be wrong to trust that they are not actively lying to me. But how do I move from here to an accurate picture of general doctor competence?
Or IBM-sized. But if you confined your ambitions to analyzing just meta-analyses, it would be much more doable. The narrower the domain, the better AI/NLP works, remember. There's some remarkable examples of what you can do in machine-reading a narrow domain and extracting meaningful scientific data; one of them is ChemicalTagger (demo), reading chemistry papers describing synthesis processes and extracting the process (although it has serious problems getting papers to use). I bet you could get a lot out of reading meta-analyses - there's a good summary just in the forest plot used in almost every meta-analysis.