The pharmaceutical industry has thrown off all pretense of been a science based industry and in these actions categorically prove that they are a marketing driven business in which truth is irrelevant. they are now simply too big to succeed as a science based business and controlling the narritive is the only way forward.
Worse, like the medical insurance business they have now priced themselves out of the market. Thus an actual collapse of both would bring a revolution in service and delivered quality as smaller more nimble operators grab niches.
The industry is now transitioning into a criminal monopoly provider and is thus losing consumer support.
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FAKE SCIENCE on parade as exact opposite news headlines appear right next to each other, citing the exact same study
(Natural News)
A breakthrough scientific study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association says
that vitamin D supplements are totally useless at preventing cancer.
Yet the exact same study also provides compelling evidence that vitamin D
supplements are highly effective at preventing cancer, according to the
study’s own authors. What’s going on here?
Science Daily is now publishing two completely contradictory headlines on the same science study,
one of them claiming “Vitamin D Decreases Risk of Cancer,” while
another headline on the exact same study claims, “Vitamin D, Calcium
Don’t Reduce Cancer Risk.”
This is just the latest example of “science spin” where two different
groups can interpret the exact same scientific study in opposite ways,
producing conflicting results that confuse the public. It also reveals
how certain pharma-connected publishers such as JAMA work tirelessly to smear the reputation of nutrients for preventing disease (in order to protect the profits of the pharmaceutical industry, of course).
Check out this screen shot from Science Daily taken yesterday:
Two contradictory summaries tell the opposite story from the exact same science study
Now, witness how “science” is flipped upside down by pharma-connected
“science influencers” by reading the following two story summaries,
both of which appeared on Science Daily:
Increasing vitamin D levels may lower risk for developing cancer,
according to a study conducted by Creighton University with cooperation
from the University of California San Diego. The results of the study
were released today in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Story #2: Vitamin D, calcium supplementation among older women does not significantly reduce risk of cancer
Among healthy postmenopausal women, supplementation with vitamin
D3 and calcium compared with placebo did not result in a significantly
lower risk of cancer after four years, according to a study published by
JAMA.
Both stories reference the exact same study carried out by Joan
Lappe, Ph.D., R.N., of the Creighton University Schools of Nursing and
Medicine in Omaha.
Each story justifies its conclusion with logical-sounding arguments (but only one is telling the truth)
What’s also fascinating about this glaring example of contradictory
conclusions from the same science study is that each side seems to
justify its conclusion with logic and reason.
From the pro-Vitamin D conclusion, which is supported by those who actually carried out the clinical trial:
“This study suggests that higher levels of 25(OH)D in the blood
are associated with lower cancer risk,” said principal investigator Joan
Lappe, PhD, RN, Creighton University Criss/Beirne Professor of Nursing
and Professor of Medicine. “The study provides evidence that higher
concentrations of 25(OH)D in the blood, in the context of vitamin D3 and
calcium supplementation, decrease risk of cancer” she said. These
results contribute to a growing body of scientific findings, including
results of a similar randomized controlled clinical trial preceding this
one in Nebraska women, that indicate that vitamin D is a critical tool
in fighting cancer” she said. “It is also of value in preventing other
diseases, according to previous research,” Lappe said.
However, the opposite conclusion is reached by the “JAMA Network
Journals” — an organization heavily funded by Big Pharma — which claims
“no statistically significant difference” between the two treatment
groups:
There was no statistically significant difference between the
treatment groups in incidence of breast cancer… The authors write that
one explanation for lack of statistically significant differences
between the treatment groups in all-type cancer incidence is that the
study group had higher baseline vitamin D (serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D)
levels compared with the U.S. population.
Got that? So even when the science study shows a strong difference in
cancer rates between the vitamin D group (4.2% got cancer) and the
non-vitamin D group (6.0% got cancer) — that’s a 42.9% increase in
cancer among those who were denied vitamin D supplements — the
pharma-funded JAMA Network Journals says there’s nothing to see here,
move along.
JAMA Network deliberately publishes FAKE SCIENCE that spreads an epidemic of fake news
What’s really happening here is that JAMA Network is deliberately
publishing fake news about real science, intentionally negating the
positive findings of the study with a deceptive, negative conclusion
that isn’t rooted in any evidence whatsoever.
As you can see from this JAMA Network entry
entitled, “Effect of Vitamin D and Calcium Supplementation on Cancer
Incidence in Older Women,” a “Key Points” section concludes, in
contradiction to the evidence, “Supplementation with vitamin D3 and calcium did not result in a significantly lower risk of cancer among healthy older women.”
But the data show that those who did not receive vitamin D
supplementation were at a 42.9% increased risk of cancer, compared to
the vitamin D supplementation group. That’s not significant? A 42.9%
difference between the treatment group and non-treatment group would be
celebrated as a “breakthrough” if we were talking about a drug designed
to prevent heart attacks or cancer. JAMA Network Journals is chock full
of articles describing advances in pharmaceutical medicine that showed
only a fraction of those statistical gains. In some drug trials,
statistical differences as low as 5% are frequently heralded as
significant evidence that the drug is “efficacious.”
Obviously, JAMA Network has become a pharma-influenced fake science propaganda rag
that applies a gross double standard to its analysis of clinical trial
results. At JAMA, all drugs trials are automatically assumed to be
“statistically significant” while all studies on nutrients are
automatically assumed to show nothing significant at all.
That’s not science. That’s just industry propaganda parading around, pretending to be “facts.”
UK Daily Mail goes all in for pharma’s LIES, claims vitamin D supplements are useless
Based on the JAMA Network Journal’s dishonest analysis of the study,
the UK Daily Mail goes on to publish a totally false article — fake news
— that ridiculously claims vitamin D supplements are useless for
preventing cancer, doing a tremendous disservice to its own readers.
Its headline blares, “Fashionable vitamin D supplements do NOT reduce the risk of cancer – despite years of evidence to the contrary.”
The story goes on to report a blatant falsehood, claiming, “Taking
fashionable Vitamin D supplements does not reduce the risk of cancer for
older women, a study shows.”
In truth, the study shows a 42.9% increase in cancer risk among those
who did not take the supplements. Yet the UK Daily Mail reports the
opposite, misleading its readers who, living in the UK, already suffer
from chronic vitamin D deficiency due to the lack of sunlight across
most of the United Kingdom.
This is truly bad journalism on the part of the UK Daily Mail, which
typically does a far better job of reporting on nutritional
breakthroughs and even highlighting the dangers of risky medications.
Conclusion: Even mainstream medical journals push fake science when they think they can get away with it
In the current debate about “fake news” vs. real news, nobody has put
the medical science journals under the microscope to ask whether they
are deliberately pushing FAKE SCIENCE that generates fake news.
As it turns out, they do. The JAMA Network, shown here, deliberately
falsifies a fake conclusion that’s contradicted by the evidence, then
reports its conclusion as fact. That “fact” is then cited by the
mainstream media which, by default, takes JAMA conclusions as gospel
even though they are industry-influenced falsehoods.
That’s how fake news becomes “scientific fact” in the world of the
pharma-controlled mainstream media. And that’s exactly why you can’t
trust any analysis you read in any pharma-funded science journal or
medical journal. They deliberately and knowingly lie about the studies
they cover, making sure that clinical trials involving nutrition, herbs
and natural remedies always produce negative conclusions, regardless of what the data actually show.
If you want real news about science in nutrition, medicine and health, you have to read independent sources that aren’t funded by Big Pharma. This is why PLoS journals are far more credible than JAMA, by the way. It’s also why Natural News
is far more credible than the New York Times or even the UK Daily Mail
when it comes to honest reporting on nutritional science. We take no money from pharma,
which means pharma can’t control our editorial decisions. (Yes, Big
Pharma exercises near-total control over the editorial decisions of
nearly the entire mainstream media, from CNN and the Washington Post to
the medical journals themselves.)
If you want real, honest, independent news on nutritional science breakthroughs, read Natural News. We also publish Medicine.news and Scientific.news as well, so check out those sites when you want to be honestly informed.
1 comment:
I read the ARTICLES, AND unlike the authors and and natural news (a known fake news / russia associat -- see http://www.propornot.com/p/the-list.html) I understood both articles and saw no contradictory conclusions. I did see complexity. I could explain this but it would take time, and would have the same result as trying to teach algebra to my dog.
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