Details

Health and Lifestyle


Health and Lifestyle

Separating the Truth from the Myth with Statistics

von: Brian S. Everitt

32,09 €

Verlag: Copernicus
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 19.10.2016
ISBN/EAN: 9783319425658
Sprache: englisch

Dieses eBook enthält ein Wasserzeichen.

Beschreibungen

<p>The main message of this book is that people should be on their guard against both scare stories about risks to health, and claims for miracle cures of medical conditions. In the 21<sup>st</sup> century hardly a day passes without another article appearing in the media about a new treatment for a particular disease, new ways of improving our health by changing our lifestyle or new foodstuffs that claim to increase (or decrease) the risk of heart disease, cancer and the like.&nbsp;&nbsp;But how should the general public react to such claims, given that some of the journalists writing them focus on the sensational rather than the mundane and often have no qualms about sacrificing accuracy and honesty for the sake of a good story?&nbsp;Perhaps the wisest initial response is one of healthy scepticism, followed by an attempt to discover more about the details of the studies behind the reports. But most people are not, and have little desire to become experts in health research. By reading this book, however, these non-experts can, with minimal effort, learn enough about the scientific method to differentiate between those health claims, warnings and lifestyle recommendations that have some merit and those that are unproven or simply dishonest. So if you want to know if ginseng can really help with your erectile dysfunction, if breast cancer screening is all that politicians claim it to be, if ECT for depression is really a horror treatment and should be banned, if using a mobile phone can lead to brain tumours and how to properly evaluate the evidence from health and lifestyle related studies, then this is the book for you.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p><br></p>
<p>Some Medical History, a Little Statistics and a Very Small Dose of Genetics.- Treatments Good, Bad and Indifferent and How do we Tell? The Randomized Clinical Trial.- Will Drinking Too Much Coffee Result in a Heart Attack? Risk Factors and Health.- Let’s Talk About Cancer.- Food, Weight and Lifestyle: Is Eating too Much and Moving too Little Bad for Your Health?- Alternative Therapies; Magic, Miracles and Delusions.- Epilogue.</p>
<p>Professor Everitt is an emeritus professor of King’s College, London, having retired in 2004. He is the author of over 70 books on statistics including two previously published by Springer, <i>Chance Rules</i> and <i>An Introduction to Multivariate Analysis with R</i> (jointly authored with Professor Torsten Hothorn). He is also Editor-in-Chief of the journal&nbsp;<i>Statistical Methods in Medical Research</i> (SMMR). In his retirement Professor Everitt continues to write and to edit SMMR, in between frequent games of tennis and long walks in the countryside.</p><p><br></p>
<p>The main message of this book is that people should be on their guard against both scare stories about risks to health, and claims for miracle cures of medical conditions. In the 21<sup>st</sup> century hardly a day passes without another article appearing in the media about a new treatment for a particular disease, new ways of improving our health by changing our lifestyle or new foodstuffs that claim to increase (or decrease) the risk of heart disease, cancer and the like.&nbsp;&nbsp;But how should the general public react to such claims, given that some of the journalists writing them focus on the sensational rather than the mundane and often have no qualms about sacrificing accuracy and honesty for the sake of a good story?&nbsp;Perhaps the wisest initial response is one of healthy scepticism, followed by an attempt to discover more about the details of the studies behind the reports. But most people are not, and have little desire to become experts in health research. By reading this book, however, these non-experts can, with minimal effort, learn enough about the scientific method to differentiate between those health claims, warnings and lifestyle recommendations that have some merit and those that are unproven or simply dishonest. So if you want to know if ginseng can really help with your erectile dysfunction, if breast cancer screening is all that politicians claim it to be, if ECT for depression is really a horror treatment and should be banned, if using a mobile phone can lead to brain tumours and how to properly evaluate the evidence from health and lifestyle related studies, then this is the book for you.</p>
Explains in non-technical terms how statistical methods are used to provide acceptable scientific evidence in medical research Shows why randomized clinical trials are the gold standard methodology for evaluating the effectiveness of new treatments Demonstrates that the evidence behind claims for the effectiveness of most alternative therapies is, as a rule, not scientifically sound

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