Authors: Ben Goldacre
Tags: #General, #Life Sciences, #Health & Fitness, #Errors, #Health Care Issues, #Essays, #Scientific, #Science
12. The Media’s MMR Hoax
In 1957, a baby: Brynner, R., and Stephens, T. D.,
Dark Remedy: The Impact of Thalidomide and Its Revival as a Vital Medicine
(New York: Perseus Books, 2001).
Many years later: Thalidomide hero found guilty of scientific fraud.
New Scientist
(February 27, 1993).
“12 children”: Wakefield, A. J.; Murch, S. H.; Anthony, A., et al. Ileallymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, nonspecific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children.
Lancet
351, no. 9103 (1998): 637–41.
one of the few: e.g., Chess, S. Autism in children with congenital rubella.
J Autism Child Schizophr
, no. 1 (January–March 1971): 33–47.
a tenacious investigative journalist: briandeer.com/wakefield/vaccinepatent.htm 299. “including the BBC”: No jabs, no school says labour MP, news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7392510.stm.
one survey: Schmidt, K.; Ernst, E.; Andrews, D. N. Survey shows that some homoeopaths and chiropractors advise against MMR.
British Medical Journal
325, no. 7364 (September 14, 2002): 597.
32 percent: Hargreaves, I.; Lewis, J.; Speers, T. Towards a better map: science, the public and the media, Economic and Social Research Council (2003),
www.esrc.ac.uk/ESRCInfoCentre/Images/Mapdocfinal_tcm6–5505.pdf
.
peak of the media: Boyce, T.,
Health, Risk and News: The MMR Vaccine and the Media
. (New York: Peter Lang Publishing Inc, 2007), p. 307.
published a paper: Ibid.
not a single one
: Durant, J., and Lindsey, N. GM foods and the media. Select Committee on Science and Technology, Third Report, Appendix 5,
www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ldselect/ldsctech/38/3810.htm
.
a systematic review: Smeeth, L.; Cook, C.; Fombonne, E.; Heavey, L.; Rodrigues, L. C.; Smith, P. G., et al. MMR vaccination and pervasive developmental disorders: a case-control study.
Lancet
364, no. 9438 (2004): 963–69.
This study was big: Madsen, K. M.; Hviid, A.; Vestergaard, M.; Schendel, D.; Wohlfahrt, J.; Thorsen, P., et al. A population-based study of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination and autism.
N Eng J Med
347, no. 19 (2002): 1477–82.
“Scientists in America”:
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/06/23/nmmr23.xml
.
a very similar study: Afzal, M. A.; Ozoemena, L. C.; O’Hare, A., et al. Absence of detectable measles virus genome sequence in blood of autistic children who have had their MMR vaccination during the routine childhood immunization schedule of UK.
J Med Virology
78, no. 5 (2006): 623–30.
Another major paper: D’Souza, Y., et al. No evidence of persisting measles virus in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from children with autism spectrum disorder.
Pediatrics
118 (October 4, 2006): 1664–75.
In some parts:
www.westminsterpct.nhs.uk/news/mmr0405.htm
; Pearce, A., et al. Factors associated with uptake of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine (MMR) and use of single antigen vaccines in a contemporary UK cohort: prospective cohort study.
BMJ
336, no. 7647 (2008): 754.
a systematic review: Chapman, S., et al.
Med J Aust
. 183, no. 5 (September 5, 2005): 247–50. Grilli, R., et al. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 4 (2001): CD000389.
A mischievous paper: Phillips, D. P., et al.
N Engl J Med
325 (1991): 1180–83.
systematic quantitative surveys: Schwitzer,
G. PLoS Med
5, no. 5 (2008): e95.
Meanwhile, the incidence: HPA. Confirmed measles mumps and rubella cases in 2007: England and Wales. Health Protection Report 2, no. 8 (2008); accessed April 9, 2008,
www.hpa.org.uk/hpr/archives/2008/hpr0808.pdf
.
Congenital rubella syndrome: Fitzpatrick, M. MMR: risk, choice, chance.
Brit Med Bulletin
69 (2004): 143–53.
epidemic in 2005: Gupta, R. K.; Best, J.; MacMahon, E. Mumps and the UK epidemic.
BMJ
330 (May 14, 2005): 1132–35.
And Another Thing
“The true cost”:
www.economist.com/research/Economics/alphabetic.cfm?letter=O
.
I have done my absolute best to keep these references to a minimum, as this is supposed to be an entertaining book, not a scholarly text. More useful than references, I would hope, are the many extra materials available on www.badscience.net, including recommended reading, videos, a rolling ticker of interesting news stories, updated references, activities for schoolchildren, a discussion forum, everything I’ve ever written (except this book, of course), advice on activism, links to science communication guidelines for journalists and academics, and much more. I will always try to add to it as time passes.
There are some books that really stand out as genuinely excellent, and I am going to use my last ink to send you their way. Your time will not be wasted on them.
Testing Treatments
by Imogen Evans, Hazel Thornton, and Iain Chalmers is a book on evidence-based medicine specifically written for a lay audience by two academics and a patient. It is also free to download online from www.jameslindlibrary.org.
How to Read a Paper
by Professor Trisha Greenhalgh is the standard medical textbook on critically appraising academic journal articles. It’s readable and short, and it would be a bestseller if it weren’t unnecessarily overpriced.
Irrationality
by Stuart Sutherland makes a great partner with
How We Know What Isn’t So
by Thomas Gilovich, as both cover different aspects of social science and psychology research into irrational behavior, while
Reckoning with Risk
by Gerd Gigerenzer comes at the same problems from a more mathematical perspective.
Meaning, Medicine and the “Placebo Effect”
by Daniel Moerman is excellent, and you should not be put off by the fact that it is published under an academic imprint.
There are now endless blogs by like-minded people that have sprung from nowhere over the past few years, to my enormous delight, onto my computer screen. They often cover science news better than the mainstream media, and the feeds of some of the most entertaining fellow travelers are aggregated at the website badscienceblogs.net. I enjoy disagreeing with many of them—viciously—on a great many things.
And last, the most important references of all are to the people by whom I have been taught, nudged, reared, influenced, challenged, supervised, contradicted, supported, and, most important, entertained. They are (missing too many, and in very little order): Emily Wilson, Ian Sample, James Randerson, Alok Jha, Mary Byrne, Mike Burke, Ian Katz, Mitzi Angel, Robert Lacey, Chris Elliott, Rachel Buchanan, Alan Rusbridger, Pat Kavanagh, the inspirational badscience bloggers, everyone who has ever sent me a tip about a story on [email protected], Iain Chalmers, Lorne Denny, Simon Wessely, Caroline Richmond, John Stein, Jim Hopkins, David Colquhoun, Zoe Pagnamenta, Chantal Clarke, Sarah Ballard, Shalinee Singh, Catherine Collins, Matthew Hotopf, John Moriarty, Alex Lomas, Andy Lewis, Trisha Greenhalgh, Gimpy, shpalman, Holfordwatch, Positive Internet, Jon, Liz Parratt, Patrick Matthews, Ian Brown, Mike Jay, Louise Burton, John King, Cicely Marston, Steve Rolles, Hettie, Mark Pilkington, Ginge Tulloch, Matthew Tait, Cathy Flower, my mum, my dad, Reg, Josh, Raph, Allie, and the fabulous Amanda Palmer.
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
abdominal pain
abortions
abstinence
Achmat, Zackie
acidic creams
acupuncture
ADHD
advertising
Advertising Standards Authority (ASA)
affluence
African potatoes
Afzal paper
Agent Orange
aging
AIDS; colonialism and; Durban Declaration on; Mbeki’s views on; polio vaccine and; Rath’s views on; South African spending on antiretroviral drugs for; Tshabalala-Msimang’s proposed treatment for;
see also
HIV
Alameda Times-Star
alcohol
alcoholism
alertness
alpha hydroxy acids
alternative therapies; “authoritative” explanations and; cherry-picking in; flawed studies in favor of;
Independent
article in favor of; lasers used in; placebo effects and; prior belief bias and; “symptoms vs. causes” and; vaccines and;
see also
homeopathy; nutritionism, nutritionists
Alzheimer’s disease
American Association of Nutritional Consultants
American College of Nutrition
amino acids
amputations
anasthetics
ANC
Andersen, Bjorn
anecdotal evidence
anemia
anesthesia
angina
angioplasty
Angola
animal experiments
anorgasmia
antiarrhythmic drugs
antibiotic resistance
antibiotics
anticonvulsants
antidepressants
antioxidants; trials of
antiretroviral drugs; deaths blamed on
apartheid
Apotex
Aqua Detox
arnica molecules
arthritis
artificial intelligence
ARV drugs
asbestos
Asch, Solomon
Asher, Richard
Asperger’s syndrome
atoms
ATP Stimuline
attributional bias
Australasian College of Health Sciences
Australia
autism; MMR vaccine and
availability bias
Avogadro, Amedeo
AZT
babies, sleeping habits of
Baby and Child Care
(Spock)
back pain
Bacon, Francis
bacteria
badscience website
Baha’i faith
Banana Stem
Barbie Detox
Barbie Liberation Organization
BBC
BBC America
BBC Panorama
Beecher, Henry
beetroot
beta-carotene
biases, xii; attributional; cognitive illusions; toward positive evidence; prior belief; publication; randomness and; regression to the mean and; selection; social influences
big pharma,
see
pharmaceutical industry
Bingham, Sheila
BioCare
biochemistry
bioenergetic field
biotech
birth control
Blackwell paper
Blair, Cherie
Blair, Leo
Blair, Tony
blindings
bloating
blobbogram
bloodletting
blood pressure
blood sugar
blood tests
Boiron
Boston Globe, The
Botswana
bowel cancer
bowel problems
Boycott, Rosie
“Brain Buttons,”
Brain Gym
Brain Gym Teacher’s Manual
brands
Branthwaite paper
breast cancer
breathing exercises
Brink, Anthony
Bristol, University of
British Medical Journal
Bronx
Buddhism
Bustin, Stephen
calcium
Cambridge, University of
Canada
cancer; bowel; breast; lung; prevention of, xii; Rath’s views on
cannabis
Cape High Court
capital punishment
Caplin, Carole
Caplin, Sylvia
carbon dioxide
cardiac deaths
Card Sharks
cargo cults
carotene
Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial (CARET)
carotid arteries
Carrey, Jim
carrots
case-controlled studies
case series
causality; correlation and
CD4 cell count
cells
cellulose
CERN podcast
Chadwick, Nick
Chagas’ disease
Chalmers, Iain
Charles, Prince of Wales
chemotherapy
China
chlordiazepoxide
chlorine gas
chlorophyll
chloroplasts
chocolate
cholera
cholesterol
Christianity
chromium
Cimetidine
cinchona bark
circumcision
Clark, Sally
Clayton College of Natural Health
cleaning
Clinical Examination
(Epstein and de Bono)
Clinton, Bill
clitoris
cloning
clustering
cocaine
Cochrane, Archie
Cochrane Collaboration
CocoaVia
cofounding variables
cognitive illusions
cognitive system
cohort studies
colds
colonoscopies
communal reinforcement
complemetary and alternative medicine (CAM)
condoms
confirmatory information
conformity
congenital rubella syndrome
contamination
control group
Cooper paper
cornflake
“correction for multiple comparisons,”
correlation, causality and
cosmetics
Covabeads
crack
cramps
creatinine
creationism
Creative Living
(McKeith)
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
curcumin
curry
cyclosporine A
Daily Express
(UK)
Daily Mail
(UK)
Daily Mirror, The
(UK)
Daily News
(New York)
Daily Telegraph, The
(UK)
Daniel
Darwin, Charles
data mining
deafness
de Berk, Lucia
de Bono, David P.
Declaration of Helsinki
Deer, Brian
deferiprone
delayed-onset muscle soreness
Delicious
(McKeith)
DeLuz, Roni
Denmark
Department of Health
detox; by ear candles; through feet; as meaningless;
see also
toxins
detox foot patch
diagnoses
dialysis
diarrhea
diclofenac
diet, healthy
digestion
dilution
Dispatches
DNA
Dominican University
dopamine
doubt
Dowden, Angela
dowsing
drug-resistant bacteria
drug trials
D’Souza paper
Duesberg, Peter
duplicate publication
Durban, South Africa
Durban Declaration
dyslexia
ear candles
Earthletter
earwax
ECG interpretation
eclampsia
ecological fallacy
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
Economist, The
Elder Pharmaceuticals
electrolysis
Emerald detox
emotional immediacy
employment
“End of Homeopathy?, The,”
endorphins
enemas
“Energizer” exercise
energy
enzymes
epidemiology
Epstein, Owen
Ernst, Edzard
ethics
eugenics
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction
European Union
Evans, Imogen
evidence-based medicine; cornerstones of; percentage of treatments as; placebo-controlled trials and
evolutionary psychology
exercise
experiments, controlled; on ear candles; on footbaths
exposure, outcome and
extroversion
ezetimibe
face creams
faith healing
false beliefs
false positives
fat
fatigue
FDA MedWatch
feedback mechanisms
feline AIDS
fentanyl
fertility
Feynman, Richard P.
Finland
“first in man” studies
Fisher, Ronald
Fitzpatrick, Mike
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), U.S.
food intolerance
food supplement industry, ix
food supplement pills
footbaths
Forbes, John
Forensic Science Service
Foster, Peter
frame problem
France
Frankfurt, Harry
Fraser, Lorraine
Freaks, Geeks and Asperger Syndrome
(Jackson)
free radicals
Fruitella Plus
Fruit Flush Diet
fruit juice
fruits
funnel plot
gallbladder
garlic
Garrow, John
gastric ulcers
gem therapy
General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12)
General Medical Council (GMC)
genetically modified (GM) food
Germany
germ theory
Gigerenzer, Gerd
G.I. Joe dolls
Gilovich, Thomas
Global Forum for Health Research
Global Fund
Goemaere, Eric
goji berries
Gould, Stephen Jay
GP Research Database
GQ
Gracely paper
Graham, Sylvester
graham crackers
granola bars
Gray, Muir
Great Ormond Street Hospital
Greenhalgh, Trisha
Grünenthal
Gryll paper
Guardian, The
(UK)
Hadacol
“Hadacol Boogie,”
Hague
Hahnemann, Samuel
Hall, Jerry
Harvard School of Public Health
Harvard University
hassle barrier
headaches
Healer, The
(Hall)
healing rituals
Health Store News
Healthy Eating
(McKeith)
heart attack drugs
heart attacks
heart disease
heart surgery
hemophilia
hepatitis B vaccine
Herald Tribune
herbalism
herbal potions
Herceptin
herd immunity
heroin
Hershey’s
Hildebrandt paper
Hill, Austin Bradford
Hinduism
HIV; antiretroviral drugs in prevention of; Durban Declaration on; needle exchange programs and; Rath’s views on;
see also
AIDS
HIV tests
“holism,”
homeopathy; AIDS treated by; benefits of; ethics of; first principles of; history of; meta-analysis of; money and; placebos vs.; regression to the mean and; trials of; value of ceremony in
Horny Goat Weed
How to Read a Paper
(Greenhalgh)
hunger
hydrogen peroxide
hydrolysis
hydrolyzed carbohydrates
hydrolyzed X-microprotein nutricomplexes
hypertension
ibuprofen
“imbalances,”
immune system
immunology
Independent, The
(UK)
infections
inoculations
Institute of Medicine
insulin
intensive care
International AIDS Conference
International Criminal Court
intervention trials
introversion
intuition, statistics vs.
ipecac
Iraq War
Ireland
iron
irrationality;
see also
biases
ischemic heart disease
Islam
Italy
ITV
Jackson, Luke
Jadad score
Jainism
JAMA
jameslindlibrary.org
Jenner, Edward
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Johnson, Alan
Journal of American College of Nutrition
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Journal of Medical Virology
Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine, The
Judaism
Justice Department, U.S.
Kano, Nigeria
Katahn paper
Kawashima paper
Kellogg, John Harvey
ketamine
ketchup
keyhole surgery
Khayelitsha, South Africa
kidneys
Kirsch paper
knee pain
Knipschild, Paul
Kocher, Theodor
Krigsman, Arthur
Laboratory of the Government Chemist
Lancet, The
Laryngoscope
Latin America
Lawson, Nigella
lead
LeBlanc, Dudley J.
Lee-Potter, Lynda
lemons
Lévi-Strauss, Claude
life expectancy
Linus Pauling Institute
liver
Living Food for Health
(McKeith)