Can You Trust Official Medical Research Data?
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Are you listening and believing to what your doctor or turn-of-the-day medical expert tells you, just because she can quote or show you a reference to an official research study?
If the Journal of the American Medical Association is worth any of your trust, the advice being sent is that you better take some time and review ANY medical information before setting yourself up for being sliced up or cured with medicines of any kind.
Yes, though you may not like it, starting to use your head again, while taking greater personal responsibility for your health choices, may be the best cure of all. Dig the information that interests you and start studying yourself instead of blindedly trusting what the “specialists” and experts tell you. Use them as an additional source of info, but maintain control of who is the one to decide what is true and best to do.
In essence, “dig deep” before selling your beliefs to the supposed “facts” served by those few having medical university certificates and/or such enormous financial clout and interests to have direct access to you via all the traditional media channels.
According in fact to a major research report recently published by the Journal of the American Medical Association, of 49 highly cited original clinical research studies,
7 (16%) were contradicted by subsequent studies,
7 others (16%) had found effects that were stronger than those of subsequent studies,
20 (44%) were replicated, and
11 (24%) remained largely unchallenged.
Hard to believe?
