Huzzah for medicine that works
Well, good news. The hard work of Sense About Science has brought about a definitive statement from the World Health Organisation that condemns the use of homeopathy for serious diseases, clarifying that it cannot treat such things. Turns out the preference is for medicine that works, and stands up to trails and testing. How ‘western’ and ‘narrow-minded’!
From Sense About Science:
The WHO has responded to a call from young medics and said that it DOES NOT recommend the use of homeopathy for treating HIV, TB, malaria, influenza and infant diarrhoea. In an open letter to the WHO in June this year, the group of early career medics and researchers from the UK and Africa asked the body to make clear that homeopathy cannot prevent or treat these serious diseases in the face of its growing promotion by manufacturers and practitioners. The Director General’s office has confirmed that the responses from WHO departments (below) โclearly express the WHO’s positionโ. Today the Voice of Young Science network, who coordinated the letter, has written to the health ministers of all countries to publicise the WHO’s position, asking them to combat the promotion of homeopathy for these dangerous diseases.
Comments from the WHO:
Dr Mario Raviglione, Director, Stop TB Department, WHO:
โOur evidence-based WHO TB treatment/management guidelines, as well as the International Standards of Tuberculosis Care (ISTC) do not recommend use of homeopathy.โ
Dr Mukund Uplekar, TB Strategy and Health Systems, WHO:
โWHO’s evidence-based guidelines on treatment of tuberculosis…have no place for homeopathic medicines.โ
Dr Teguest Guerma, Director Ad Interim, HIV/AIDS Department, WHO:
โTheย WHO Dept. of HIV/AIDS invests considerable human and financial resources […] to ensure access to evidence-based medical information and to clinically proven, efficacious, and safe treatment for HIV ยฆ Let me end by congratulating the young clinicians and researchers of Sense About Science for their efforts to ensure evidence-based approaches to treating and caring for people living with HIV.โ
Dr Sergio Spinaci, Associate Director, Global Malaria Programme, WHO:
โThanks for the amazing documentation and for whistle blowing on this issue… The Global Malaria programme recommends that malaria is treated following the WHO Guidelines for the Treatment of Malariaโ.
Joe Martines, on behalf of Dr Elizabeth Mason, Director, Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Development, WHO:
โWe have found no evidence to date that homeopathy would bring any benefit to the treatment of diarrhoea in childrenรขโฌยฆHomeopathy does not focus on the treatment and prevention of dehydration โ in total contradiction with the scientific basis and our recommendations for the management of diarrhoea.โ
COMMENTS FROM EARLY CAREER RESEARCHERS:
Dr Robert Hagan, Postdoctoral Researcher, Biomolecular Scientist, University of St Andrews:
โWe need Governments around the world to recognise the dangers of promoting homeopathy for life threatening illnesses. We hope that by raising awareness of the WHO’s position on homeopathy we will be supporting those people who are taking a stand against these potentially disastrous practices.โ
Juliet Stevens, Medical Student, University of Oxford (on placement at Somerset State Hospital, Cape Town, South Africa):
โDespite awareness in Britain of the medical burden in South Africa, little can prepare you for seeing this first hand. On the Paediatric wards infants are diagnosed with stage 3 HIV/AIDS on a daily basis, and TB meningitis is rife. The minimal cost of state healthcare is prohibitive for some, and denial regarding HIV diagnoses is still common, making the population here a vulnerable target for unproven therapies.โ
Tom Wells, PhD student, Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London:
โTreatments, developed through rigorous, clinical testing are powerful tools with which to save lives. To undermine their application by promoting alternatives, without evidence of efficacy, is irresponsible and dangerous. All people suffering with TB, malaria, influenza and the ravages of HIV deserve proven treatments, not false hope.โ
Dr Daniella Muallem, Postdoctoral researcher, Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology, UCL:
“When medicines exist which have been proven to be highly effective at treating life threatening diseases such as HIV and malaria I believe it is highly unethical to advocate treatments for which there is no good evidence as an alternative for poor people.”
Evelyn Harvey, Biochemist and Medical Writer:
โThe aggressive stance some homeopathic practitioners take towards life-saving drugs for HIV, TB, malaria and other diseases that ravage the developing world is irresponsible, patronising and unnecessary. We should not deny people in developing countries access to the full facts and to high-quality scientific evidence.โ
Duncan Casey, PhD student, Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London:
โThis isn’t the difference between two schools of medicine; this is like comparing a 747 to a magic carpet.รย The magic carpet is a lovely idea โ but at the end of the day, which would you rather trust with your life?โ
COMMENTS FROM SENIOR SCIENTISTS AND MEDICS:
Dr Peter Flegg MD, FRCP, DTM&H, Consultant Physician, Department of Infectious Diseases, Victoria Hospital:
“As a physician who has had first hand experience of the devastating effects of these life-threatening infections in Africa, I am frankly appalled that anyone would consider treating them with totally irrational, ineffective and unproven therapies. These infections all have effective conventional treatments available, and to use homeopathy for them is highly unethical and morally repugnant.โ
Professor Raymond Tallis, Emeritus Professor of Geriatric Medicine, University of Manchester:
โThe catastrophic consequences of promoting irrational and ineffective treatments for serious illnesses have been demonstrated in South Africa, where Thabo Mbeki’s policies have led to an estimated 365,000 unnecessary premature deaths. The prospect of replicating this reckless behaviour elsewhere in developing countries by advocating homoeopathic treatments for AIDs and other potentially lethal conditions is appalling. I hope that the timely intervention by the Voice of Young Science Network will help to pre-empt a public health disaster. It illustrates the importance of young scientists, torchbearers for a better future, taking a stand and speaking out.โ
Dr Alastair Miller MA FRCP DTM&H, Consultant Physician, Tropical & Infectious Disease Unit, Royal Liverpool University Hospital:
โWe frequently see patients in our unit from developing countries who have been advised to take inappropriate and unproven therapies for their HIV and not to take the very well established and effective anti viral agents. This leads to tragic and inevitable breakdown of the immune system and very adverse outcomes for our patients.โ
Dr NJ Beeching, Senior Lecturer and Clinical Lead in Infectious Diseases, Tropical and Infectious Disease Unit, Royal Liverpool University Hospital:
โInfections such as malaria, HIV and tuberculosis all have a high mortality rate but can usually be controlled or cured by a variety of proven treatments, for which there is ample experience and scientific trial data. There is no objective evidence that homeopathy has any effect on these infections, and I think it is irresponsible for a health care worker to promote the use of homeopathy in place of proven treatment for any life-threatening illness. Newย treatments, whetherย conventional or homeopathic,ย shouldย not replace current therapy unless theyย have beenย shown to beย at least as effective inย carefully monitored clinical trials.โ
Dr David Misselbrook MSc MA FRCGP, Dean, Royal Society of Medicine:
โI offer my personal support to the stand taken by Sense about Science and the Voice of Young Science in their letter to the WHO expressing their concern about the use of homeopathy to treat serious disease in the developing world.โ
โHomeopathy is valued by patients in wealthy countries as a complementary therapy that may help them to feel better during periods of illness. However there is no good quality scientific evidence that homeopathy is effective against serious diseases such as TB, malaria or AIDS. It seems quite wrong to encourage Western complementary therapies in the developing world when they stand in such acute need of the basics that we take for granted such as clean water, sanitation and access to proven medical treatments for serious disease.โ
Professor Tom Welton FRSC, Professor in Sustainable Chemistry, Head of the Department of Chemistry, Member of advisory panel for the Pan African Chemistry Network:
โIt is with shock that I read that homeopathy is being proposed as an alternative to scientifically proven treatments for life-threatening diseases such as malaria and HIV/AIDS. Homeopathy proposes that diseases can be cured by tinctures that contain no active ingredient. There is, of course, no systematic evidence that shows that these work. To propose that a therapy for which there is no evidence for its efficacy as a substitute for treatments that have been shown to work is reckless and frankly wicked. If this is not prevented, lives will be lost.โ
โI remember the days before the introduction of antiviral therapies for the treatment of HIV/AIDS, when the only hope that my sick friends had to cling to was treatments such as homeopathy. They died in appalling numbers. The advent of effective anti-viral drugs has turned this situation around completely and I have not lost another friend since. It is imperative that these drugs are made available to all who can benefit from their use, not that they are replaced with so-called treatments that don’t work.โ
Professor Nicholas White OBR FRS, Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford; Chair, Wellcome Trust SE Asian Units and of the WHO Antimalarial Treatment Guidelines Committee:
โWe still rely heavily on natural products for the treatment of malaria (Cinchona alkaloids, artemisinin derivatives), but we use quality assured products at doses shown conclusively to be effective. Malaria is a potentially lethal infection. Treating with inadequate doses or ineffective products diverts the patient from receiving effective medicines and may result in their death.โ
Dr Ron Behrens, Director, Hospital for Tropical Diseases:
โI would strongly support this letter. There is an important role for anti-malarial compounds extracted from local plants for the treatment of malaria, which are being, and have been identified through careful research in a number of developing countries. However their clinical use should follow the same rigorous scientific evaluation and testing as all drugs for humans.โ
Professor JM Ryan, Emeritus Professor of Conflict Recovery, St George’s Hospital University of London:
โThose who practice conventional medicine live in a world constrained by the need to consider best evidence when recommending therapies and this is absolutely the correct approach.โ
is that Gordon Ramsay?
Is the use of topless nurses empirically successful?
Is that Gordon Ramsey? ๐
I like Duncan Casey’s magic carpet analogy, very funny! Still can’t help but look for hidden words in the text though… there’s just so much I don’t know where to start!
Derren you PERV! STOP WATCHING PORN!
As for the rest of you, do not encourage him! His bank balance cannot tolerate this!
What a good excuse to post porn on your blog.
Excellent news!
one day, that guy will be in an old folks home with demensia and will start stripping whenever they come in with his medication.
NAUGHTY MR BROWN – VERY NAUGHTY…. spoiling a nice photograph like that with those HUGE black patches…. ๐
How delightfully ‘western’ and ‘narrow-minded’ indeed! magic snake testicle sunflower tea anyone?!
In the words of Dara O’Brien;
‘At first all there was was “Homeopathic Medicine”. Then they tested it and the stuff that worked became “Medicine”.’
Good for them — the peddling of quack ‘medicine’ to people in need is a shameful business, and needs to be stopped.
On a more pictorial note, why is it that porn actors and actresses tend to be so damned ugly?
Nice bush. ๐
Well what do you expect? It is Friday…
About time too. Referring to the article, not the picture.
What web site that pic come off and is it free?
I dunno, those nurses are certainly working wonders on me.
Oh my Goody, donรยดt watch that piccie! ….You might go blind!
Does that fall under: homeopathy or real medicine or working medicine? Guess in this case it depends on the patients needs, not the medicine.
On topic though….good news from WHO!
I think I’m starting to see things…..2 messages saying exactly the same thing and Derren making a typo! ๐
LC x
But seriously, this can only be good news.
LC x
123?
Derren you **** t**t! I’m already in enough f***** s*** with her in doors without this coming out!
I worked in Malawi for a year and managed to contraact Malaria twice, was not impressed, but how people could think that homeopathy could help with that amazes me! As far as I’m concerned, bring on the drugs!!
Paranoia is worringly creeping in again…. I could have sworn there were only 2 black boxes when i first saw that pic?! r the boxes appearing magically… in some sort of pattern? or clue???
or were those the only 2 black boxes my mind had deemed important to notice…. which doesnt really say much about me now does it….
I’m a tad confused now, unless I’m seeing things those smaller black squares weren’t there before..
haha, why did you “box out” her nose? maybe she had a boogie hanging down..
PROOF OF PR
I Dont think your seeing things, I thought the same. Im sure there wernt that many Black Squares Previously (Allthough we both could be seeing things)
The constant mind tricks are getting to me. Now the boxes are making me think it’s the Channel 4 logo.
Can someone pass the brain-bleach please?
Trashy Pawn playing with the kings crown. @ Gordon Ramsey – Well you should have though of that you two headed, I mean two faced f**kw*t. Sorry, couldn’t resist. ๐
Hey, who is sensoring the nose from the other woman and the mans titties? and and and and??…Think Phillis is having a go at it… or Abeo,…orrr is that piccie slowly disolving back in time?… stop that! ๐ฟ
One of Derren’s recent tweets: ‘I’m notably flatulent today. Taken myself aback more than once. Dear oh dear. Deary me.’
TAKEN MYSELF ABACK…?
there’s also a new video up on youtube, the author is called ‘final for’. It’s a video of The Events advert which goes all weird. If you pause it at the right time, when you see writing on the screen, and hold a mirror above you monitor it reads ‘splice here’ with an arrow. Any ideas?
@ H – I’m assuming that means he wasn’t expecting it. Or it was so explosive he was literally taken aback! ๐
Oh dear, too much info me thinks…..
LC x
LOL @ Derrens “Taken myself aback” at his own wind post!
(Ironically, the captcha taxt to add this comment was the onomatopoeic “frdsppd”)
@H – I’ve just viewed that vid on YouTube, they’re saying it’s gone like that for some people who tried reversing the trailer. Blimey, it’s weird. I couldn’t see what you saw though.
LC x
Haha, I love how boxes keep appearing… first just the ‘naughty bits’, then the poster’s representation of said bits, and now they’re just all over the place *grins*. At this rate, when I check back in a few hrs, I fully expect just a black square with the post!
I’m telling you it’s there – between 7 and 8 seconds I think. This is driving me up the wall, I’ve been at my computer for hours piecing things together, but just when I conclude I’m done I find something else. I’m pretty sure it will all be meaningless and we’re discussing pointless clues and looking for pointless patterns, very much like the subjects Derren used in that room which was locked – with the money outside.
Nevertheless I’m still intrigued!!!!!
And I was merely postulating Derren’s use of ‘taken aback’ was a concurance (not sure if that’s a word) with our discussion on everything being backwards (obviously) and possibly even something to do with time travel. Again, probably total bollocks.
I see Phillis is posting some screeshots of his collection of porn again on behalf of derren lol ๐
what about accupunture, hypnoses, nlp etc etc.? I thought it was a common fact that people first should check regular medicine although I also know that there are people not too fond about regular medicine .. but not when it comes to more serious diseases .. despite the side effects ..
Maybe they are also afraid that people will start to sue …
I didn’t see all those black boxes before…and I’ve noticed that anything that..ehem….sticks out, is being covered up..even the nose and the elbow lol
Oh Derren! I expected male nurses from you…
Back to the point: thank Darwin for that! At least the WHO has some sense!
Malaria, TB, the runs, maybe. But HIV? Come on, neither homeopathy OR conventional medicine saved my mate, or the many others who die of it every year.
condemn homeopathy by all means, it’s a pile of poo, but please don’t hold up conventional medicine as a credible alternative, as far as HIV goes.
As for anthropocentrism – that’s a good point Xenephon and Derren make in the other blog – how do those sentiments fit with this blog post in view of the WHO’s requirement, and conventional medicine’s practice, that all drugs and procedures must first be tested on animals? If you accept conventional medicine you have to accept anthropocentrism because millions of animals will suffer, and be killed, in .pursuit of human health.
By all means, walk your own path, but please be…
…consistent
How rude ๐ฎ
PS: What time is it Mr Woolf? ๐
x
Oh my! The crappy stereotype of the “sexy nurse.” Sorry fellas, in real life they wear real ugly uniforms, kinda like scrubs.
And there is NOTHING sexy about getting a catheter inserted up your you know what. Ouch!
Here’s a tip I picked up from a pen I found in a dubious giftshop… If you turn the monitor upside down the black boxes disappear
Hmmm….I used to be quite open-minded about things like homeopathy (for simple things, NOT stuff like malaria and diabetes,) but now I’m not so sure. ‘You can be open-minded until your brain falls out…’ I’ll have to think about this one.
By the way, does the black box covering that guy’s ding-dong REALLY need to be that big?
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Annie – conventional medicine, unlike some alternative practitioners, does not claim to be able to cure HIV. But what it has presented vast amounts of good evidence for is that anti-retroviral treatment on average can greatly prolong reasonably healthy life. More importantly, conventional medicine has also shown good evidence that anti-retroviral drugs significantly reduce vertical transmission of HIV (ie from pregnant mother to baby). In a country ravaged by HIV like South Africa, such treatment could make a massive difference. Sadly, alternative therapists like Vitamin-Salesman Matthias Rath appear to have got in there – see Ben Goldacre’s Bad Science pages for that: http://www.badscience.net/2009/04/matthias-rath-steal-this-chapter/ [cont].
Annie – [cont]: The Rath/ Goldacre tale also shows how keen the woo-merchants are to turn to the libel courts to bully dissenters into submission – so much easier than actually presenting any decent scientific evidence, isn’t it? See also the current delights of the British Chiropractic Association suing journalist Simon Singh after he dared to point out the lack of evidence for much of what they claimed to be able to treat.
Jess xxx – As a doctor, I have seen enough strange things that I try not to dismiss anything out-of-hand, but some people have a mind so open that they have let all sorts of rubbish fall in. Or, stick a homeopath in a typical GP surgery with 10 minutes per patient, and watch their patient satisfaction rates plummet faster than a politician’s integrity.