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by janeway
1106 days ago
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I am sure I miss the context but I guess the point is that authors were sick of hearing about the promise of statistical analysis and epidemiology which will outperform classical medical approach - slandering the BMJ several times for some reason. Even today we see some hanger-ons who assert that their way is the best way - that they know from personal medical cases and their opinion and interpretation is more valuable than some statistical prediction. Well, if I have understood their sentiment correctly; facts are facts. Today the best medical care in the world is driven by data-based adaption rather than subjective opinion. If a treatment has a robust statistical impact it will be preferred. If new methods produce outcomes no better than random noise then we must agree that they are not better. If the physician has anecdotes about why they think some trick works best then - in the words of Pearson - “statistics on the table, please”. I am sorry to make the joke but it seems apt:
“Dr Charlatan disgruntled about needing evidence for science”. |
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Statistics have an inherent weakness when you don’t have consistent buckets to place everything into. If individual specialists classify cases differently they really can see statistically valid numbers from relatively few cases where double blind studies using different classification criteria see improvements below the noise floor.