Bad Advice
Or Why Celebrities, Politicians, and Activists Aren't Your Best Source of Health Information
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Narrated by:
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Patrick Lawlor
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Written by:
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Paul A. Offit MD
About this listen
Science doesn't speak for itself. Neck-deep in work that can be messy and confounding and naïve in the ways of public communication, scientists are often unable to package their insights into the neat narratives that the public requires. Enter celebrities, advocates, lobbyists, and the funders behind them, who take advantage of scientists' reluctance to provide easy answers, flooding the media with misleading or incorrect claims about health risks. Amid this onslaught of spurious information, Americans are more confused than ever about what's good for them and what isn't.
In Bad Advice, Paul A. Offit shares hard-earned wisdom on the dos and don'ts of battling misinformation. For the past 20 years, Offit has been on the front lines in the fight for sound science and public heath. Stepping into the media spotlight as few scientists have done - such as being one of the first to speak out against conspiracy theories linking vaccines to autism - he found himself in the crosshairs of powerful groups intent on promoting pseudoscience. Bad Advice discusses science and its adversaries: not just the manias stoked by slick charlatans and their miracle cures but also corrosive, dangerous ideologies such as Holocaust and climate-change denial.
©2018 Paul A. Offit (P)2019 TantorCritic Reviews
"The author's rare storytelling...leads to an entertaining and captivating read that is hard to put down." (Melissa Stockwell, MD, MPH, Columbia University Medical Center)
• other topics: problems with supplement industry etc (albeit one shouldn't take it as a dismissal of it's usage where it's truly necessary).
• homeopathy: issues with its concepts are well covered, though I do wonder if it's so diluted why does the medicine taste so concentrated in places like india and has an affect beyond what placebo could affect or even work when people didn't believe in it and for some people when it works.
• so sure may be homeopathys fundamentals logically had some issues and whoever practicing it is a problem but may be things changed after that in some countries where they might be practing different things? anyway something's missing there.
well written on how science gets misinterpreted!
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