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190 lines
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190 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2685
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Title: HPR2685: Scientific and Medical Reports
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2685/hpr2685.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 07:29:29
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2685 entitled, Scientific and Medical Reports, and in part of the series,
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Health and Health Care.
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It is hosted by AHUKA, and in about 14 minutes long, and currently in a clean flag.
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The summary is, we need to be careful about evaluating news reports about medical studies.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an Honesthost.com.
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With 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code, HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's Honest and Fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is AHUKA, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio, and another episode in our series
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on health and taking care of yourself.
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I want to spend a few episodes talking about evaluating medical reports.
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We get a lot of them, but do we really know how good they are?
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How do we evaluate them?
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There are some issues that I think really need to be discussed.
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There I am at least, and I assume this is true for a lot of people.
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You get a news story every day about some new medical breakthrough or discovery of some
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kind, and God forbid you go online, so I'll kind of nonsense there, but just unlike, say,
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a television news program, or a newspaper or a magazine, which are what people refer
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to as legitimate news sources.
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When you get online, it's always some amazing trick.
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Doctors don't want you to know, and it's like, why don't they want you to know?
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That's never really explained.
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I'm not quite sure what's going on with some of this stuff.
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Or an amazing new diet breakthrough that lets you eat as much as you want of anything
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you like and still lose weight.
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If you believe any of that, I would like to interest you in a bridge I have for sale.
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But even the legitimate news sources have a problem, which is that they have what is
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called the news hole that has to be filled every day.
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And stories about health and medicine are popular, people like hearing about this stuff.
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The problem is that making these stories sound exciting almost always means, at the very
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least, overstating the results and may mean hyping a result that does not exist.
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Now to give you some idea of how bad this is, I'm going to reference an article from a
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place called journalistsresource.org, called covering health research, choose your studies
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and words wisely.
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This article is very enlightening if you have never looked closely at this issue.
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Now in this article, they cover the results of a story by Noah Haber and others published
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in something called PLOS-1.
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Now you can go to the original PLOS-1 paper if you like.
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And I've got links to all of this in the show notes, but if you're not used to reading
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academic papers, I think the journalistsresource.org article is much more accessible.
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Now Haber and his co-researchers and listed 21 reviewers, all of whom had at least a master's
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degree and a majority of them had enrolled in or completed a doctoral program.
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They in turn looked at 64 articles that were among the most chaired on Facebook and Twitter
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and then at the 50 studies that were the basis for these stories.
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Now the first issue they dealt with was causality.
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To say in a scientific study that A causes B requires some pretty strict high quality evidence.
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You may have heard the trueism that correlation is not causation, and that is true.
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For example, a study of food and drug use can show that drinking milk as a child causes
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opioid addiction.
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After all, the addicts all consumes milk as children, didn't they?
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Now, in reality, though that's not the case, and no reputable scientific study would
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claim that.
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But you have to watch out for the opposite error.
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The opposite error is when someone piously pipes up with correlation is not causation,
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and then dismisses anything they don't like.
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This is an error because every causation relationship starts with a correlation by definition.
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So correlation is not causation should be something that tells you, okay, there may or may not
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be something we need further study to pin that down.
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It's not to get out of jail free card, and I see a lot of people doing that these days.
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Frequently, it's with something like climate change, and you point out all these studies
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proving that there's climate change.
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It's about correlation is not causation, I can ignore you.
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Go away.
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So that's not a good thing to do.
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Now, in Habers' study, they felt that the claims in many papers were stronger than the
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evidence really supported.
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They said that a third of the papers they reviewed made claims that the data could not support.
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And often the language used is a bit weasel worded, like saying there is an association
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between A and B.
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Well, association is just another term for a correlation, which may or may not mean anything.
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It's not technically wrong to say that, but what happens when a journalist gets that paper?
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Although the journalist B is careful as they should be, in many cases no.
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But they also warn against dismissing all associational studies, as we were just talking about.
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Closation always starts with correlation.
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It's something you do want to pay attention to.
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You just don't want to bet your life savings on it without better evidence.
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Now, the article in JournalistResource.org is aimed at journalists.
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And wants to encourage better articles, so they say, check with the author of a paper and
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ask them straight out if what they found is causal.
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Now for you and I, that might not be an option, though there is no law against it as far as
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I know, but it is one way to get a handle on something.
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Next you want to consider the peer review process.
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The best quality research goes through peer review before it is published, which means
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that scientists who are in the field have read the paper, examined the methods employed,
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and looked at the conclusions to determine if the appropriate standards have been met.
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In many cases, the reviewer will raise questions, or even suggest additional work be done
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before a paper meets the standards for publishing.
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This is certainly the process for the major journals, but lately there has been a push
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to open up the process.
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Many of the major journals are very expensive, and can delay publication by a year or more.
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In the age of the internet, that is seen as unnecessary and a bit elitist, so many researchers
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have taken to publishing their papers online.
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PLOS 1, in fact, is an online journal that incorporates peer review, and it is part
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of a larger family.
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PLOS stands for Public Library of Science, and that public library of sciences and number
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of journals, mostly focusing on biology, medicine, and life sciences.
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Now in other sciences, there is something that is spelled ARXIV, but it is pronounced
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ARXIV.
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What ARXIV does is it focuses on what are called pre-print articles that may later be published
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in a traditional journal, although I think ARXIV is starting to have some status on its
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own.
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There is moderation, but not necessarily any technical peer review for these articles.
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They are called pre-publication, so that is supposed to suggest that later on they probably
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will get published in a major journal of some kind.
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Now, statistical significance.
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Medical and biological statistics is complex.
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People get PhDs in this stuff, and is regarded as one of the more difficult ones to get.
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And full disclosure, I am not one of the people who has done this.
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I do not have a PhD in medical and biological statistics, or bio-stats, as it is usually
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referred to.
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Now I have, however, taught statistics at the university level.
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I am an economist by training, so the stats I taught were more in the business and economics
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area, but I think I am qualified to give some basic guidance on how this stuff works.
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Now if a study is well done, there will be a test of significance that determines whether
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or not you have a real result.
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Generally, the way you should proceed is to state an hypothesis up front.
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For example, eating breakfast will raise a child's grades.
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That is decent hypothesis, worth studying.
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Then you gather the data that contests this hypothesis.
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Ideally, you would have a study that has a study group that would be the children getting
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breakfast, a controlled group, children who do not get breakfast, and right away you see
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how tricky this is.
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Who on earth is going to make a bunch of children go without breakfast?
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I can just picture the politicians holding hearings on that one.
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Anyway, once the data is gathered, you do a test.
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The way this is done may be a little counterintuitive, but it works like this.
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Your hypothesis is that eating breakfast results in better grades.
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You therefore have something that is called a null hypothesis, which is that eating breakfast
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does not improve grades.
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You employs statistical tests.
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In this case, let's suppose it's a T-test, which is a very common test in statistics.
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You choose a level of significance, which generally, in most cases, it's going to be .05.
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You compute a test statistic from the data, and you compare that test statistic to your
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table of T-statistics.
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You may well have data that looks like eating breakfast improves grades, but you want
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to guard against any random chance.
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So if the probability of getting that result due to pure chance from a population where
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there is no effect of breakfast is .05 or more, you fail to reject the null hypothesis.
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In other words, you did not find a statistically significant improvement in student grades.
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Little tricky, didn't it?
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So what's going on?
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Table of test statistics.
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So the T-test is just one of a number of tests that are out there.
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There's an F-test, a chi-square test, etc.
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All of them are based on an analysis of groups of data.
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What you're trying to do is when you collect the data, you're trying to ask a question that
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says, could I, by pure chance, have gotten this result in a population where there is
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no relationship at all, and that's really what you're trying to get at.
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And so when you take a significant level of .05, what you're saying is, I want to make
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sure that there is a less than 5% chance, could be 4.9%, but less than 5, that I would get
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the wrong result here.
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Now, there's some interesting consequences to all of this.
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By definition, a certain percentage of the time you will reach the wrong conclusion.
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This is all based on probabilities.
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Things refer to this as type 1 and type 2 error, but if you want, you could call it false
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positive and false negative.
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In this case, we assume a T-test with a significant level of .05, we will fail to reject
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the null hypothesis if we get a p-value or probability of more than .05 or more than 5%.
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Well, given randomness, that means we will be wrong in our conclusion 5% of the time,
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or one time out of 20, even if the research was done 100% properly by good researchers,
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who do not make any mistake at all.
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Now the proper conclusion to all of this is not, as some might have it, that nobody knows
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anything to do whatever you feel like.
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We've made great strides in medicine in the last few decades.
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Many diseases that were once automatic death sentences, such as many forms of cancer,
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now can be managed or even cured.
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We do have a big problem, though, with misplaced cynicism and distrust that leads to insane
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ideas like the one that vaccinations are bad for you.
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The only way to reliably avoid such things is to ground our thinking in science, but
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that in turn means understanding how science works and how we should interpret the results
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we get.
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So, this is Ahuka for Hacker Public Radio signing off and is always reminding you to support
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free software.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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