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By me in the BMJ: the dodginess of drug company trials
Here’s a piece by me in the British Medical Journal this week, published online already, and in the print edition this Friday. It’s a head to head with Vincent Lawton, who until recently was head of Merck in the UK. Briefly, I set out the quantitative evidence demonstrating the scale of the ...
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All bow before the mighty power of the nocebo effect
badscience.net — Ben Goldacre, Saturday 28 November 2009, The Guardian This week the parliamentary science and technology select committee... looked into the evidence behind the MHRA’s decision to allow homeopathy sugar pill labels to make medical claims without evidence ... (more) All bow before the mighty power of the nocebo effect
Parliamentary Science and Technology Select Committee on homeopathy today
I gave evidence at the Parliamentary SciTech committtee today for their enquiry into whether the government had used scientific evidence properly in making their decisions about MHRA licenses for homeopathic pills, and homeopathy treatment on the NHS. This was a mini-enquiry as a result of ...
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Oh, that was quick
Ben Goldacre, Saturday 21 November 2009, The Guardian Once your medicines regulator decides it should change the side effects warnings on the patient information of a drug taken by millions of people, how long do you think it would take for that change to be implemented? In February 2008 the ...
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wtf?
Ben Goldacre, Saturday 14 November 2009, The Guardian It’s always interesting when people take pseudoscience out of its natural habitat – Islington – and off into a place where the stakes are quite high. Like the polio vaccine scare in Nigeria. Or Aids denialism in South Africa. Or detecting ...
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The Nutt Sack Affair (part 493)
Ben Goldacre, Saturday 7 November 2009, The Guardian Obviously it’s pleasing to see, in the storm of commentary over Professor Nutt’s sacking, that everyone outside of politics now recognises the importance of scientific evidence in devising laws. But a strange reasoning twitch has appeared, in ...
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