Homeopathetic

Thursday, April 16 2009

homeopathyThis picture pretty much sums up why you can’t trust the BBC’s science and news coverage; it’s a grab from the Google News – Health feed a couple days ago. Compare the BBC headline -”Homeopathy ‘eases cancer therapy’” – to the CBC headline: Homeopathic remedies offer little cancer-treatment relief.

For those unfamiliar with the basic concept behind homeopathy – serial dilution – the Wikipedia entry will be helpful. The short version is that whatever “active” ingredient – herbs, minerals, duck liver – is so diluted in homeopathic product as to offer a vanishingly small chance of contact with even a single molecule of that ingredient. The theory is that the solvent – water, usually – somehow retains a “memory” of the original ingredient, and this somehow has therapeutic properties. Physicians consider this to be a form of quackery and often discourage their patients from acquiring these products, for good reason: they don’t want you to waste your money on water.

But that’s not how the people behind this study framed it. From their press release:

“In conventional oncology, oncologists or other conventional health practitioners may discourage patients from using alternative therapies due to a fear, rather than knowledge, about possible interactions. That may be due to confusion that homeopathic remedies are botanicals or herbs rather than highly dilute remedies that will not interact with drugs and are usually very safe.”

See, it’s not a test of whether or not the products work – it’s whether they have interaction effects. And they don’t. Because they’re water. Except when they’re not actually homeopathic remedies. This, from the bottom of the BBC article:

Edzard Ernst, professor of complementary medicine at the Peninsula Medical School, said there were “several problems with the body of evidence examined by this review.

“First, independent replications are lacking completely but would be necessary before we can accept any of these treatments in routine healthcare.

“Second, nobody doubts that undiluted remedies can have effects; and interestingly, the positive studies here seem to be on such medicines rather than on the highly diluted treatments which are a hallmark of homeopathy.

“In fact, the calendula cream found to be effective in one study is not diluted at all and thus it cannot, to all intents and purposes, be considered to be a typical homeopathic remedy.

“Finally, this review found hardly any high quality studies in the first place. So overall, this new piece of evidence simply confirms plenty of previous research demonstrating the unproven nature of homeopathy.”

You don’t get any of this from the headline. Nor is it clear that 6 of the 8 studies reviewed showed no evidence at all of any benefit, which is in fact the case. Instead you get a PR coup for an industry that preys on sick people. Thank you BBC for that.

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