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by Fomite
4497 days ago
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> You keep saying 'unethical' as if it's the end of the discussion. But what if our current standard of medical ethics prevent us from finding the better policies or the better treatments? Is this standard set in stone and never to be doubted? No, it's not set in stone, but if you're talking about implementing studies now, you're not going to get major medical ethics reform first. You go with the system you have, and the system you have is probably going to push back pretty hard. > No one from the control group is prevented from getting insurance on their own This alone is a difference between the control and treatment groups that takes place post randomization, and knocks said experiment back into the realm of "correlational" |
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