>You did good, Jason, German is a really difficult language to
>learn. I don't envy you
Yeah, I'm surprised at how difficult it is. I guess I thought it had more in common with english than it actually does. So it's kicking my butt!
>The Barrett vs. Koren lawsuit was thrown out by the judge
I'm afraid you have your lawsuits confused.The one that I mentioned about libel was decided in favor of Dr Barrett, not Koren. The lawsuit that is still pending has to do with Dr Barrett's suit that Koren produced misleading material in his chiropractic brochures.
While this latest version of the suit is still pending, did you read the deposition? Koren admitted that "he neither knew nor cared whether what he said was true."
The libel suits against Dr. Barrett have always been in his favor.Did you read the results of the exact same claim by another person in Pennsylvania? Same result, Dr Barrett was awarded $50,000 in damages. The only suit pending here is the one about Koren's false advertising, NOT the libel suits that I was referencing.
>I don't see that Mr. Barrett has any scientifically sound
>evidence to his claims.
On the contrary, his articles are extensively referenced in the peer-reviewed medical literature. We may choose to disbelieve such evidence, but that doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.
In a review published in the Journal
>of Scientific Exploration, eight Quackwatch articles were
>analyzed, including five written by Stephen Barrett, and found
>to be "contaminated with incomplete data, obsolete data,
>technical errors, unsupported opinions, and/or innuendo."
The "journal of scientific exploration" is not a peer-reviewed journal. This is the standard for true scientific work.
>I am just looking at his claims that diseases are not caused
>by diet, that fertilizers and pesticides have little or no
>effect on humans, or that organic food has no benefit compared
>to conventionally grown food, his claims that chemical
>sensitivities are bogus, and are probably part of a mental
>illness and that those people effected are likely
>hypochondriacs. That's enough for me to conclude that this guy
>has no credibility, at least in my opinion.
I'm glad you're admitting that it's opinion. I think right now we don't have the data that shows the benefit of organic food and a clear illness and diet connection. I'm a vegan and eat very healthy, and I believe that lifestyle factors are a much larger portion of health than we realize right now. I'm sure Dr Barrett doesn't agree with everything I think in this area (neither I with him), but that doesn't mean that his statements are not true. It may be we just need more research and larger studies to find some of these effects - but when Barrett states there's no evidence for that currently, he's right.
>You say that Barrett attacks the bad parts of alternative
>medicine, with all due respect, he attacks everything and
>anything in alternative medicine. Acupuncture, homeopathic
>medicine, naturopathic medicine, organic food, etc. etc. it
>just makes my head spin.
Yes, but there's so much bad information and quackery out there, he has a lot of material. That's hardly his fault.
>He not only attacks two time Nobel-prize winner Linus Pauling
>but also Dr. Andrew Weil, and others. Those are well-respected
>members of the medical community and certainly no "quacks"!!
Linus Pauling is a Nobel winner, but his statements about Vitamin C have been proven false. Nobody gets everything right. A true scientist admits when they are wrong, and had Dr Pauling lived to see the evidence come out, I'm sure he would have changed his mind. That's the thing with scientists, we change our mind to conform to the evidence, we don't reject the evidence because it doesn't fit with our worldview. As for Dr Weil, he also makes some questionable claims that Barrett specifically mentions. I'm sure there are many positive things about Dr Weil's books also, but that doesn't change the other parts of those books.
There is a big difference in science between criticizing someone's ideas and criticizing the person. In science, it isn't an insult to attack someone's ideas. That's all that Dr Barrett has done.
>You claim that "many things that Naturopaths or Homeopathic
>people believe in have been proven false. For example the
>latest review article on homeopathy says that there is no
>evidence that the treatments work:"
>You are absolutely wrong about that, there is more than
>sufficient effidence and research done that homeopathic
>medicine in fact does work. The only thing that they don't
>know, is, why it works.
I would dearly love to see real evidence from a scientifically peer-reviewed journal that shows that homeopathy works beyond the placebo effect. There's no evidence that it does. It isn't so because the purveyors of the homeopathy "medicines" say so - they have to back up their statements with quality evidence, and they have not done so.
>I can attest to the fact that homeopathic medicine does work
>from my own experience.
There are many explanations for why you might have improved that have nothing to do with the treatment itself. In just one case, who's to say what happened?
>I would consider myself a realist with a healthy dose of skeptisicm.
I'm glad to hear that, though you certainly seem to leave your skepticism out when it comes to alternative medicine.
>I think I just subscribe more to the homeopathic/naturopathic
>principle "first, cause no harm"
This is funny. This is not a homeopathic principle, this is in the Hippocratic Oath, which medical doctors take after graduation. This principle is about as "allopathic" as you can get.
>I [would] rather eat the right food and exercise than popping pills
>which don't do anything else than covering the symptoms.
I would agree with this 100%. I agree that the conventional medical system has major issues with pharmaceuticals and with medical devices and their over-promotion. There are many issues and problems in standard and alternative medicine. At least standard medicine is based on real science that self-corrects when exposed to enough data. Those in the alternative crowd don't do good research or even attempt to make a scientific case one way or the other.
>And I rather eat organic food, even though Mr. Barrett claims the only
>difference between organic food and conventionally grown food is
>price.
Well, there are some ethical and economic differences also. I eat organic, too. I know that right now we don't have any published scientific evidence that there's a difference - but we may in the future. I won't reject what Dr Barrett says about this just because it doesn't fit my personal worldview. Scientifically, he's right.
>When it comes to allopathic/conventional medicine we keep
>hearing about suchandsuch new pill being the best and greatest
>ever, and all over sudden, a couple of years into it, come to
>find out, oopsies, the wonderful pill has killed a whole bunch
>of people and has serious side effects (not to worry though we
>have another pill to take care of the side effects}( ) I guess
>the double-blind tests/trials are not that scientifically
>sound after all!
I will agree that the pharma industry is out of control and the conventional medicine is too pill-heavy. The Vioxx situation is a result of over-prescribing and over promotion of the drug, not the fault of the trials that studied it.
>I really am not sure what you what you base it on that Mr.
>Barrett's website is scientifically sound, I respectfully
>disagree. And guess we just have to leave it at that, we agree
>to disagree.
It's "Dr" Barrett - and his site is scientifically sound. We all have the option to reject scientific evidence if it doesn't fit our worldview. As a trained scientist and healthcare professional, I don't have that luxury - I have to stick with facts not opinions.
Whether people accept those facts is of course another issue.
Thanks for the discussion, Carola!
Have a great day!
Jason