Barking Mad - bad science in action

in #science6 years ago (edited)

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Faith was defined by St Augustine thusly: faith is to believe what you do not see; the reward of faith is to see what you believe. In 2000, in volume 321 of the British Journal of Medicine, appeared two articles that appeared to be directly contradictory of each other. Both were examining the hypothesis that dogs bite more often during the period around the full moon, and both used meta-analysis of hard data to reach their conclusions. The first study was conducted using admissions data from a hospital in Bradford, UK, while the second used data from several Australian hospitals. I am not proud, but also not surprised, to say that the dishonesty (for it can be nothing else) comes from the Australian team, or rather “Dodgy Duo”, of Chapman and Morrell.

The Bradford data examined all animal bites, and found conclusively that the period of the full moon consistently related to peak occurrence of animal bites, and that the peaks were extremely pronounced and unmistakable. The evidence clearly showed that there was a regular and pronounced increase in animal bites of all kinds as based on admissions to a hospital emergency room.

Now here comes the bad science; the intentionally misleading science; the misdirection away from evidence that does not conform to the desired 21st century ‘scientific’ paradigm. As can be seen from the title of the paper – Barking mad? Another lunatic hypothesis bites the dust – the paper was scathing about the notion that animal bite occurrence increased at the time of the full moon, and they had the data, and the graphs to prove it. And indeed they did. Their data and graphs clearly showed that the full moon was the obvious low point for animal bites in Australian hospitals, and that should have been that until the data, and the graphs, were looked at in detail. What becomes immediately obvious upon comparing the Australian graphs to the Bradford graphs is that they are virtually identical; except for the fact the high bite point is the full moon in England, and the new moon in Australia. Conversely, the low bite point in England is the new moon, and the full moon in Australia. Otherwise, if the two charts were overlaid, they are identical (or near enough to).

The obvious conclusion here is that lunar cycles are robustly shown to affect the incidence of animal bites as evidenced by hospital admission data, but that in the northern hemisphere, peak appearance is the full moon period, and in the southern hemisphere, peak occurrence is the new moon period. This in itself is a significant observation with myriad implications that deserve further research – hardly worthy of the grossly erroneous and intentionally dishonest epithet “another lunatic hypothesis bites the dust”.

Bhattacharjee C et. al (2000) Do animals bite more during a full moon? Retrospective observational analysis. British Journal of Medicine 321:1559-61.

Chapman S, Morrell S (2000) Barking mad? Another lunatic hypothesis bites the dust. British Journal of Medicine 321:1561-63.

Silverstone M (2011) Blinded by Science. Lloyd's World Publishing, London.

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Welcome Tom! Good to see you on Steemit. I’ll be looking forward to reading you here - as I could never bring myself to do the FBThing and have been reading your work indirectly. Winter coming, so will be needing your tonic and other health enhancers.

Regarding, “Barking Mad”, I know how some - lazy or worse - academics cherry pick facts and semantically manipulate their theses to their desired conclusions - not unlike far too many politicians and “advisors.” Critical thinking has always been essential to human advancement - it seems more now than ever.

As the authors of your example of bad science demonstrate, there is too much rubbish “science” and too many people just accept, without much thinking, a thesis just because... As the actor John Wayne remarked, “Life is tough. It’s tougher if you’re stupid.”

In any case, welcome to Steemit!

Haha great quote! I guess life would been pretty hard growing up as a boy called Marion too.

👏 Congratulations Tom... So glad to see you here.
PS: Now that our Tasmanian winter is getting closer... I am entertaining the delicious idea of “spending time” at my desk... So much to read and to say and write about... I’ll be following you here... in the mean time.

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