Related articles: Differences between in vitro, in vivo, and in silico studies, Grappling with uncertainty about the Marshall Protocol, Mistaking correlation for causation
Related articles: Differences between in vitro, in vivo, and in silico studies, Grappling with uncertainty about the Marshall Protocol, Mistaking correlation for causation
Though well-grounded in molecular and clinical data, the conclusions offered by Marshall Protocol researchers are sometimes met with skepticism by clinicians and fellow researchers. Some wonder how the MP science could be valid, given the existence of seemingly contradicting evidence.
Researchers who work with Autoimmunity Research FoundationNon-profit foundation dedicated to exploring a pathogenesis and therapy for chronic disease. (ARF) take no special pride in arguing that the nature of chronic disease is different than most clinicians and researchers have imagined. Indeed, it makes matters more difficult: the less familiar a conclusion is, the harder it is to persuade someone of its validity.
Using statistical inferences, John P. A. Ioannidis concluded in the prestigious journal PLoS Medicine that half of published research must be wrong.1) In grappling with a confusing study or even a field of study, it's seriously worth considering how Ioannidis could be right.
What assumptions do researchers routinely make that prevent them from embracing the science behind the MP? The following is a list of hypotheses about medical research that explains some of the hurdles that some have had to overcome thus far in accepting the MP.
The process by which studies are designed and research is interpreted and shared has a number of liabilities.
For those convinced that science is self-correcting, and progresses in a forward direction over time, we offer only discouragement. We had anticipated that as time passed, citations of the original articles would become more negative, and these articles would be less cited than other articles published in the same journal and year. In fact, support for the original articles remained undiminished over time and perhaps even increased, and we found no evidence of a decline in citations for any of the original articles following publication of the rebuttals…. [A major news report] trumpeting “Fish stocks eaten to extinction by 2050″ (Leake 2010), based on a highly contentious projection… [fails] to mention any of the 11 rebuttals that question this projection, but it misses the later consensus paper by the same author and many of his critics that reverses the earlier projection of collapse, and instead expects rebuilding to occur in 5 of 10 well studied ecosystems.
Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts.
Richard Feynman, The Pleasure of Finding Things Out (1999)
Ioannidis et al.'s 2008 Science analysis shows the long length of time that passes between discovery and translation into common practice. This work also shows how after a number of interventions supported by high-profile clinical studies, subsequent evidence from larger and/or better studies contradicts the earlier work.18)