well? Anyone?
According to some people out there, a study that is: Peer reviewed = bullshit. Any funding from any source ever = bullshit.
As already stated, reproducibility is an important measure of if it is valid or not.
Those people are dumbfucks and should be ignored.
Andrew Wakefield's Anti-vax study was peer reviewed. There are peer reviewed anti-global warming papers etc. Heck, I've seen a peer reviewed paper on the effects of lead poisoning that had some REALLY questionable data on the effects of lead and children's behavior. (some of the values for statistical significance looked to be picked to draw a coordination where none existed, the actual data looked like buck shot.)
The peer review process is not perfect and shouldn't be treated as such. While i adds credibility, it does not add infallibility, that is achieved through repeated tests.
No, of course not. But there are people who seem to disbelieve/dispute EVERYTHING related to scientific discovery and those people are complete and utter tards.
I was talking about vitamins with a good friend and they were harping about the two things I mentioned. I was mentioning that vitamins usually don't do anything because studies have shown that they don't. They referred to those two things. I said, "so every study is bs then?" Conversation stopped there basically. They didn't major in the sciences.
I was talking about vitamins with a good friend and they were harping about the two things I mentioned. I was mentioning that vitamins usually don't do anything because studies have shown that they don't. They referred to those two things. I said, "so every study is bs then?" Conversation stopped there basically. They didn't major in the sciences.
Ummm, What? Most vitamins have some REAL health benefits (and drawbacks when overdone) that are well known. It is the random herbal supplements that you have to be wary of.
You're saying that taking a multivitamin actually does something?
http://www.wellnessuncovered.com/joomla/images/stories/centrum_multivits.jpg That that does something significant?
Last I checked, it doesn't. There are things like taking Vitamin D which apparently does something, but most don't.
Multivitamin/folic acid supplementation in early pregnancy reduces the prevalence of neural tube defects
http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/262/20/2847.short
A randomized trial of multivitamin supplements and HIV disease progression and mortality (decreases HIV)
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa040541
Small study, but rate of reported infection was decrease by multivitamin
http://www.annals.org/content/138/5/365.short
Randomised controlled trial of vitamin E in patients with coronary disease (decreases chances of heart disease)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0140673696908661
Most (maybe not all) of the ingredients in, say, centrum you can freely google and find that, yes, they do have proven health benefits.
So, yes, I would say that taking a multivitamin DOES actually do something. Science tends to agree with me.
From what I read, in the general public it doesn't do much at all. Maybe it's different for small subsets of the population.
Care to actually link to "what I read"? I've already provided you with several peer reviewed papers which pretty much claim you are wrong. Do you need more?
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=daily+vitamin&btnG=Search&as_sdt=0%2C44&as_ylo=&as_vis=0
Go nuts with ACTUAL papers. Most of them talk about benefits.
Many more can be found by breaking apart the ingredients of a daily multivitamin .
