Cordial Deconstruction

Observations from our shared single objective reality in a materialistic, naturalistic, & effectively macro-deterministic universe.

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Off to TAM 7 & SBM Conference

Posted by Karl Withakay on July 8, 2009

I’m off to Las Vegas to attend The Amazing Meeting 7 and the  Science Based Medicine Conference with my friend Scott of Polite Dissent!

Nearly all my favorite bloggers will be there, and the concentration of such blogging talent in one place could cause Las Vegas to collapse into an internet black hole!

I see the high temperatures in Las Vegas are supposed to be between 102F & 107F from today through Sunday.  Whose bright idea was it to hold a conference in Las Vegas in July?  Well, I suppose it will be a dry heat, but then again,  so is an oven.

Posted in Critical Thinking, Medicine / Health, Science, Skepticism | 3 Comments »

America’s Most Endangered Malls

Posted by Karl Withakay on June 29, 2009

This being the off season for TV, I’m having a hard time finding many jucy targets that I want to deconstruct.

So, just so I have something to post, I’ll mention this Yahoo article on America’s Most Endangered Malls that caught my interest.

I read the whole article and was surprised to find no mention of the mall in Willamette, Colorado anywhere.  I thought for sure that between the current recession and the 2006 outbreak that it would be on its last legs, but I guess there’s not many other places to shop in Willamette.

Maybe in a couple of years, yahoo will have a followup article on America’s most endangered casinos.

That is all.  🙂

Posted in Deadpan, Humor, Yahoo Features | 2 Comments »

Heads Up: Acupuncture Anesthesia: Part IV

Posted by Karl Withakay on June 26, 2009

Heads Up: Kimball Atwood has posted part IV of his series on acupuncture anestesia over at Science Based Medicine.  Go check it out.

Posted in Heads Up, Medicine / Health | Leave a Comment »

Zicam Increases Risk of Iocaine Poisoning!

Posted by Karl Withakay on June 18, 2009

The FDA has issued a warning that using Zicam can lead to anosmia, which is a loss of the sense of smell.  Many bloggers in the blogosphere (pretty much most of the sites in my Daily Sites links) have covered this already, but they have all ignored the most serious potential risk of anosmi from taking Zicam: Iocaine Powder poisoning

As we all know, the best way to detect Iocaine Powder is from its lack of scent, but if you can’t smell anything at all, how will you know if something doesn’t have a scent (or has no added scent) since everything lacks a scent to you?

Of course the Iocaine poisoning risk would be greatest for people in Australia and people going up against Sicilians when death is on the line.

Rumor has it that land wars in Asia will be unaffected.

I felt that this risk needed to be brought to people’s attention.

That is all.  🙂

Posted in Deadpan, Humor, Medicine / Health | 3 Comments »

Nuerologica’s Deconstruction of Homeopathy

Posted by Karl Withakay on June 15, 2009

It’s Homeopathy Awareness Week!  Head over to Steven Novella’s Neurologica and read his excellecnt post Deconstructing Homeopathy.

Posted in Heads Up, Medicine / Health | Leave a Comment »

Deconstruction: 5 Secrets to Preserve Your Eyesight

Posted by Karl Withakay on June 15, 2009

OK, finally, an actual Deconstruction.  Deconstructing various Yahoo features will probably be a semi-regular feature of my blog, for as long as I actively maintain the thing.

Yahoo’s main page frequently features various “health” articles of somewhat dubious value, and now I finally have a blog on which to deconstruct one.

Today I saw the story, 5 Secrets to Preserve Your Eyesight (warning for the right-click impaired, the link opens in the same window), and decided to take a look.

It’s pretty typical fare for the types of “health” articles Yahoo features, providing a lot of sciencey sounding, but unsupported recommendations, appeals to ancient wisdom, and repeating one or more already debunked medical myths.

The first particular I’ll address is the first “secret”

1. A juice to brighten your eyesight
An age-old Chinese folk remedy for clearing the vision is a blended juice made from celery, peppermint, and Chinese parsley. Research has caught up with this wisdom, and we now know that luteolin, an antioxidant bioflavonoid found in these three ingredients, has been found to provide the best protection of cell DNA from radiation. Some evidence shows that luteolin helps protect the eye from UV radiation damage, as well as from glycation, a process in which sticky sugar molecules bind up protein, potentially damaging the retina. Luteolin also promotes healthy blood sugar levels and regulates insulin sensitivity. Blend together celery, peppermint, and Chinese parsley in a blender with a little water or a juicer. Drink this fresh juice daily to see well into the future!

First, I’ll just address that the article provides no references to support the claims made in any way; we’re just supposed to accept that the author speaks with authority.  It may be unrealistic to expect support references, but at least a passing mention of the source of the research and evidence would be nice, as in “research at XYZ University in 2001  showed….”.

Next, notice how the article doesn’t say that  these ingredients have been “shown to provide the best protection of cell DNA from radiation”, “protect the eye from UV radiation damage, as well as from glycation”, or “promotes healthy blood sugar levels and regulates insulin sensitivity”, only that substances found in these ingredients have.  In my experience, this is fairly typical of mainstream media “health reporting” in general.

The reasoning goes something like this:  Item A has been shown to have health benefit Y.  Item B contains item A, therefore item B has health beneift Y.  This is fallacious logic.  There are numerous reasons why item B may not have health benefit Y.  Item B may or may not contain sufficient amount of item A, it may contain item A in a different (less effective or ineffective) form, or item B may contain other ingredients that offset or nullify the beneficial effects of item A.

If item A has been shown to have health benefit Y, and item B contains item A, we can say there is reason to investigate item B to see if it too has benefit Y, but that’s about it.

Item 2 “Eat for Eye Health” is essentially a bunch of unsupported claims which may or may not be true.   I don’t feel like taking the time to research them to see if they hold any merit (It’s my first real Deconstruction, give me a break).

Item 3, “Stay hydrated” parrots the debunked notice of needing to drink 8 glasses of water a day (even the CDC still parrots that one, so it’s hard to blame the author too much for it) and adds that proper hydration is essential for good eye function.  It’s of course important to not become dehydrated, but most people’s current liquid intake is already fine.

Item 4, “Eye exercises to fight floaters“: I spent a few minutes searching the internet, and found no scientific support for these claims.  I did find info on the Mayo Clinic’s site describing the causes and treatment of floaters, but strangely never found any of these exercise listed.  Wearing of UV-protective sunglasses is something my eye doctors have been recommending for decades, so I’m OK with that advice.

Item 5, “Instant eye remedies“: is mostly unproven, scienced up herbal remedies, but the recommendation for eye exams is reasonable.

As we get to the end of the article, surprise-surprise, we find that the author, one Dr Mao, has a book he wants you to buy, and he also sells “natural health products”  on the Tao of Wellness website.

Dr Mao’s website states that he  “is a doctor of Chinese medicine and an authority in the field of Anti-Aging Medicine” and “has two doctorate degrees and wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on nutrition”  It does not say what institutions he has his doctorates from, and it although it says his dissertation was on nutrition, it does not state that either of his degrees are in nutrition.  He is most clearly not an MD, and this is something which is not at all clear in the Yahoo article.

I get the feeling that people like Dr Mao really want us to actually use only 10% of our brains, and not think critically when consuming information.

Posted in Medicine / Health, Yahoo Features | 1 Comment »

Stop the Presses: AP Reports the Obvious

Posted by Karl Withakay on June 12, 2009

OK, so it’s not exactly a deconstruction, but with the TV season ended, all the best material to deconstruct is gone, so here’s a modest first deconstruction.

Surfing Yahoo sports for NFL news, as I tend to do once I’ve exhausted my favorite science/critical thinking blogs, I discovered a story with  the following headline:

Raise locked up, McNabb wants to win Super Bowl

Maybe the AP didn’t think a story headline  about Eagle’s QB Donavan McNabb getting a raise without a contract extension was attention grabbing  enough, but adding the bit about wanting the win a Super Bowl seems unnecessary.

It’s a well written story, and gives good explanations for why the Eagles would restructure McNabb’s deal for more money over the next two years without giving him an extension, but come on, what NFL player doesn’t want to win a Super Bowl?

I’ve got two more headlines for the AP:

Scientists Report Water is Wet; Fire is Hot

GM: Not Doing So Well

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

First Post: No Deconstruction today.

Posted by Karl Withakay on May 29, 2009

Inasmuch as many others have undertaken to compile web blog accounts of the things going on among us , it seemed fitting for me as well, to write out for you, most excellent web reader, a blog so that you may know my thoughts on things that strike my interest.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment »