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Orac wants you to join the Society for Science-Based Medicine

Because of my involvement in this organization, I am hijacking my own blog for one day for my own nefarious purposes. To that end, I am republishing an announcement that originally appeared yesterday at a blog that a significant fraction of you are familiar with, but nowhere near all of you. And I want all of you to know about this, because I hope that some of you will join our cause.

I’m also going to add a few words of my own, because I can’t help it. (As Hans Solo once said, “Hey, it’s me.”) The reason this new organization, the Society for Science-Based Medicine, is so needed is because, quite frankly, in the skeptical movement SBM is but one area of many areas of concern, and, in my estimation, one that doesn’t receive attention proportional to the real societal damage done by quackery. That has changed a bit (this year’s TAM featured two talks on Stanislaw Burzynski, and the skeptical movement has shown a gratifying movement towards combatting the antivaccine movement over the last few years), but, even so, I don’t think I exaggerate too much when I say that, even now, SBM tends not to be as prominent a concern in organized skepticism as other brands of pseudoscience and unreason, in particular creationism, religion, and the paranormal. This viewpoint should be nothing new to regular readers of this blog; I’ve made no secret of my opinion. It should also come as no surprise that I tend not to be an anti-theism warrior, if ever I was. I’m perfectly happy to let others fight that battle. These days, the only time I ever address such issues tends to be when they intersect with medicine, as in the case of Sarah Hershberger or Christian Science believers using prayer instead of medicine to treat diabetes in children. Nor should it surprise anyone that I write much less about evolution and the paranormal than I used to do back in the early years of this blog, although I do still occasionally wander back to revisit those territories from time to time, particularly when evolution intersects with medicine, as it does so much in cancer.

No, these days I’ve pretty much specialized, and that’s what’s needed in medicine, a specialization in promoting science and combatting pseudoscience in medicine, hence the need for a new organization. SBM and how pseudomedicine threatens public health are my main topics now. The harm pseudomedicine does is undeniable; it is direct and indirect; and it is often immediate. Worse, as I’ve described time and time again, both here and at my not-so-super-secret other blog, it is invading and metastasizing throughout the field of medicine, in particular in medical academia, a phenomenon I like to refer to as quackademic medicine. Those of us who try to slow or block the rise of pseudomedicine are scattered, outgunned, underfunded, and beset by a profound apathy in the medical profession, also known as the “shruggie” phenomenon. It’s a rag tag band against Dr Oz and his media empire. Skeptical organizations, on the other hand, have segments of their membership who are interested in combatting quackery, but they tend to lack the expertise, with relatively few physicians and other medical professionals available. The problem is that so few physicians actually know what “complementary and alternative medicine” is, why “integrative medicine” is the “integration” of pseudoscience with SBM, and what the basis of much of CAM really is, and fewer still have an interest in skepticism.

A new organization is needed to counter unreason and pseudoscience in medicine. That is why the Society for Science-Based Medicine is being founded. That is why I want you to join us.

For more details, please read Mark Crislip’s announcement and, if the idea of such an organization appeals to you, join:

We are proud to announce a new organization: The Society for Science-Based Medicine.
A Society for a community of like-minded individuals, both in and out of health care, who support the goals of Science-Based Medicine.

People should not suffer, die, go bankrupt, and lose time and hope because of complementary and alternative pseudo-medicine.

The mission of the Society for Science-Based Medicine includes, but is not limited to,

  1. Educating consumers, professionals, business people, legislators, law enforcement personnel, organizations and agencies about Science-Based Medicine.
  2. Providing resources and information for information concerning all aspects of Science-Based Medicine.
  3. Providing a central resource for communication between individuals and organizations concerned about Science-Based Medicine.
  4. Supporting sound consumer health laws for the practice of Science-Base Medicine and opposing legislation that undermines Science-Based Medicine.
  5. Encouraging and aiding legal actions in support of the practice of Science-Based Medicine.

Why another organization? Why a Society for Science-Based Medicine?

A problem with Science-Based Medicine (SBM) is what we support often manifests in what we oppose: those medical practices that are not based in science and reality. Those who promote Supplements, Complementary and Alternative Medicine are well organized and well funded: There are organizations for every conceivable pseudo-medical therapy, dozens upon dozens of them.

In contrast there are almost no organizations devoted promoting Science-Based Medicine. There is the Institute for Science in Medicine, an excellent policy group, and in Australia the Friends of Science in Medicine.

That is it.

In the US there are the two organizations, the Center for Inquiry (CFI) and the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF), both of which address issues related to SBM but as a small component of their overall mission.

This lack is due in part to the expertise it requires to critically address issues related to complementary and alternative pseudo-medicine. If you have not spent a life immersed in medicine and the medical literature, it is more difficult to critique a study on the efficacy of acupuncture or understand why antineoplastons are not an effective therapy for cancer.

And yet.

Medicine is a team sport. Medicine cannot be practiced well by the lone provider. You need all the other medical and nonmedical colleagues. There are many who contribute to the care of patients. The Society for Science-Based Medicine will be no different. We will all get ill, we will all decline, and we will all die. We all need to participate in, and understand the complex issues around, medical care, both science-based and fantasy-based.

We need to do it together.

Health care providers and skeptics are notoriously difficult to organize. We pay for our lack of organization. Little voice in the political process, little recognition, and few resources to advocate for change. Scattered bloggers, however eloquent, will not have the impact of even a small but organized and modestly funded organization.

Organization leads to the power to change the status quo, and in part due to well-funded organizations, as well documented in the Bravewell report, pseudo-medicine is becoming part of the status quo. Organization results in a larger voice and money. And, unfortunately, money is superior to a pure heart and good intentions for accomplishing goals.

The issues related to science-based medicine need a larger voice and more prominent position since there no areas of pseudo-science that result in as much daily morbidity, mortality and expense as the use of pseudo-medicine.

No one routinely declares bankruptcy over issues related UFOs or dies because of Bigfoot or has chronic disability from ghost hunting. Pseudo-medicine routinely kills, damages, and financially exhausts patients and their families.

Complementary and alternative pseudo-medicine is a minor issue for main stream medical organizations who lack the interest and expertise to oppose them. Most in the medical world shrug their shoulders when it comes to pseudo-medicine. As the Bravewell Collaborative demonstrates, when busy people shrug their shoulders, medical nonsense insinuates itself into otherwise-excellent medical schools and hospitals.

What we are for, our guiding principles, were summed up by Steven Novella, slightly modified:

Respect for knowledge and truth – SBM values reality and what is true. We therefore endeavor to be as reality-based as possible in our beliefs and opinions. This means subjecting all claims to a valid process of evaluation.

Methodological naturalism – SBM believes that the world is knowable because it follows certain rules, or laws of nature. The only legitimate methods for knowing anything empirical about the universe follows this naturalistic assumption. In other words – within the realm of the empirical, you don’t get to invoke magic or the supernatural.

Promotion of science – Science is the only set of methods for investigating and understanding the natural world. Science is therefore a powerful tool, and one of the best developments of human civilization. We therefore endeavor to promote the role of science in our society, public understanding of the findings and methods of science, and high-quality science education. This includes protecting the integrity of science and education from ideological intrusion or anti-scientific attacks. This also includes promoting high quality science, which requires examining the process, culture, and institutions of science for flaws, biases, weaknesses, and fraud.

Promotion of reason and critical thinking – Science works hand-in-hand with logic and philosophy, and therefore SBM also promotes understanding of these fields and the promotion of critical thinking skills.

Science vs. pseudoscience – SBM seeks to identify and elucidate the borders between legitimate science and pseudoscience, to expose pseudoscience for what it is, and to promote knowledge of how to tell the difference.

Ideological freedom/free inquiry – Science and reason can only flourish in a secular society in which no ideology (religious or otherwise) is imposed upon individuals or the process of science or free inquiry.

Neuropsychological humility – Being a functional SBM proponent requires knowledge of all the various ways in which we deceive ourselves, the limits and flaws in human perception and memory, the inherent biases and fallacies in cognition, and the methods that can help mitigate all these flaws and biases.

Consumer protection – SBM endeavors to protect themselves and others from fraud and deception by exposing fraud and educating the public and policy-makers to recognize deceptive or misleading claims or practices.

What we oppose is summarized in Dr. Mehmet Oz’s pronouncement:

“Medicine is a very religious experience. I have my religion and you have yours. It becomes difficult for us to agree on what we think works, since so much of it is in the eye of the beholder. Data is rarely clean. You find the arguments that support your data, and it’s my fact versus your fact.”

Dr. Oz is wrong. We have a way of determining what works: the methods of science. Like all tools it is only as effective as the person wielding it.

There are many short-term and long-term goals and projects for the Society. While we are starting small, our vision for Science-Based Medicine (SBM) is large.

Community

The site will be a place for like-minded individuals to communicate, educate and organize. Unfortunately, being online, without beer.

We want there to be local branches of the SfSBM, at your medical school, to have your own SBM at the pub, to organize lectures, and to advocate for SBM in your community.

Education

We want the site to be a central repository for all aspects of SBM: reference material, blogs, wiki, audio, video, reviews, legal and legislative advocacy, links and more.

The SfSBM blog

There are two blogs for the society.

There is Science Based Medicine, which has been publishing since January 1, 2008 and the site blog, which concerns activities of the Society and the web site.

The SfSBM conference

There has never been a scientific conference devoted to SBM and there needs to be a regular meeting. It should be CME-accredited.

The SfSBM podcast

Currently the Quackcast is the only SBM-related podcast.

The SfSBM wiki

Available at http://www.sfsbm.org/wiki2, eventually to become the central source for information on all aspects of SBM.

The SfSBM medical school core curriculum

Many medical school curricula are designed by proponents of complementary and alternative pseudo-medicine. There needs to be a core body of information, perhaps as an iBook or other ebook format, for all health care students.

The SfSBM journal

Once there was the Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine, “Devoted to objectively analyzing the claims of alternative medicine.” This journal, or an equivalent, needs to be revived, perhaps as an electronic journal on the model of PLOS.

ebooks

Currently available at the JREF, Amazon, Nook and iTunes, the essays through June 2011 from the SBM blog have been organized into a dozen volumes. Every two years there will be new versions.

SfSBM advocacy

Complementary and alternative pseudo-medicine proponents are actively engaged in expanding their practice by legislative means. There needs to be a voice of reality to counter the efforts of Complementary and alternative pseudo-medicine practitioners.

And more.

So welcome to the Society for Science-Based Medicine. Those who agree with the concept that the best medical care should be based on reality and science need a voice and an organization for everyone.

An educational organization devoted to understanding and education, ‘exploring issues and controversies in the relationship between science and medicine.’

As a group we can accomplish almost anything.

Jann Bellamy

Mark Crislip

David Gorski

Harriet Hall

Steven Novella

Founders and Officers, Society for Science-Based Medicine

By Orac

Orac is the nom de blog of a humble surgeon/scientist who has an ego just big enough to delude himself that someone, somewhere might actually give a rodent's posterior about his copious verbal meanderings, but just barely small enough to admit to himself that few probably will. That surgeon is otherwise known as David Gorski.

That this particular surgeon has chosen his nom de blog based on a rather cranky and arrogant computer shaped like a clear box of blinking lights that he originally encountered when he became a fan of a 35 year old British SF television show whose special effects were renowned for their BBC/Doctor Who-style low budget look, but whose stories nonetheless resulted in some of the best, most innovative science fiction ever televised, should tell you nearly all that you need to know about Orac. (That, and the length of the preceding sentence.)

DISCLAIMER:: The various written meanderings here are the opinions of Orac and Orac alone, written on his own time. They should never be construed as representing the opinions of any other person or entity, especially Orac's cancer center, department of surgery, medical school, or university. Also note that Orac is nonpartisan; he is more than willing to criticize the statements of anyone, regardless of of political leanings, if that anyone advocates pseudoscience or quackery. Finally, medical commentary is not to be construed in any way as medical advice.

To contact Orac: [email protected]

22 replies on “Orac wants you to join the Society for Science-Based Medicine”

Orac,

Could you have done the announcement sooner? I wanted to register tonight but then I have to wait until some money trickle in from my borrower to pay for the 85$.

Alain

If you’re going to try to make a journal, I can edit and typeset it on the house, but I ain’t got no 85 smackaroonies just lying around.

If you’re going to try to make a journal, I can edit and typeset it on the house

I hope you are not planning to charge contributors $900 per contribution, or to spam random academic e-mails with calls for papers and editors.

Well done – I am a member of Friends of Science in Medicine and joined after going to the Aussie Skeptics. Convention in 2012 – it seems like the most useful way to direct your energy for good rather than WOO (James Randi gave the keynote address)

I hope you are not planning to charge contributors $900 per contribution, or to spam random academic e-mails with calls for papers and editors.

I could outdo PLOS Computational Biology without breaking a sweat. In fact, I just dropped them a note about their hopelessly broken author LaTeX instructions. Seriously, check this out. It’s an inconsistent mess. Compare the in-line built fractions above and below Eq. (5). Note that <sub> tags are used in B-level heads (except when they’re not) but not in the main text. Note the atrocious positioning of overbars. Behold the utter catastrophe that is the summation in the first paragraph of “Simulations on weighted networks.”

I don’t even have the heart to look at the PDF.

Just put in the req for my work to pay for it. mwuahaha. See you there soon.

I am pleased to hear this: your empire expands, Orac.
And you steal Mikey’s thunder.**

** today the loathesome bugger announces his ” heavy metal lab reports” for “off-the-shelf food” offered as a service of his “Consumer Wellness Center ” non-profit ( @ Labs.NaturalNews.com/ Forensic Food Lab) which will reveal how much of various metals foods contain as well as a numerical representation ( which he pioneered) and acronymised) showing the degree to which these are retained, bind etc. Mike uses ICP-MS ( probably mis-uses) with a special focus on Uranium and Cesium because of the results of Fukushima and the radiation currently contaminating the west coast.

Narad @5 — And what is that train wreck a few lines down in the “derivation of $R_0$ and $r_0$” section? Eeeeeew …

I joined as a lay member, for the $85 shilblenas, cause I have some extra dosh and Early Money Is Like Yeast.

You can sign up without becoming a member, in fact Mark Crislip recommends you sign up AND become a member because there may be some kinks in the process and signing up keeps you in the loop.

You can also sign up and NOT become a member but donate, so there are a lot of ways to go here.

@ Liz Ditz: I’m a contributor with last year’s *big pharma filthy lucre* which I managed to save. Mark Crislip assures me that I will have “full functionality” on the site…shortly.

Heh, heh, he just doesn’t know who he is dealing with…I’ll be calling on my buddies if I run into problems. 🙂

To the entire SBM Team, congratulations from Canada! This is a great idea whose time has come, you can count on my joining and my unfettered support. It’s a tough gig being a WooBuster, as a united front, we’ll increase our chances of winning this war on science and reason. Orac – are you contemplating a Canadian ‘subsidiary’ of the society? Is there a mechanism that we could come up with that could see us as part of this great venture? Please note, I’m not talking about any business structures, rather more like a community structure. Yes, there’s an international boundary between us, but a connection may prove valuable.

The SSBM needs to offer a good selection of T-shirts.

A large-capacity coffee mug would also be nice.

And while I support the concept (and am mulling over paying the $85 membership fee out of my very next Pharma Lizard Affiliate check), getting an IT-proficient member to revamp the website in a sexier design should also be a priority.

Congrats to Orac and the other founders.

Signed up and registered, happy to be on board.
But the signup procedure for the social register is agonizingly slooowwwww. It might be the fault of my system at work, anyone else have this problem?

Darn new tablet. Probably can’t afford membership right now. Spent my Christmas money on this new toy. The neighbor kid kept stealing my laptop.

Paging Dr. Oz:
“Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts. ”
Daniel Patrick Moynihan

I’ll be signing up soon.

I had a bit of trouble with the registration page but the Quackcaster helped me through. I believe I am a member but as with all things I’ll look for the evidence. Cheers.

Speaking of science-based medicine, have a look (and an anti-nausea pill) at a “fine” example of its antithesis in this YouTube video from none other than Mike Adams.

I think the principles are all laudable but why science based as opposed to evidence based. If we have to wait until everything we do has good scientific evidence base we wont be doing much. I also wonder if their isn’t an argument for addressing poor evidence, bias and corruption in mainstream medicine. It really undermines our credibility. I also worry about how scientific methods end up controlling interventions, in mental health in attempting to establish an evidence base for CBT has lead to the use of medical diagnosis, spurious measures and manualized interventions. Non of which are compatible with what CBT was, we are testing something totally new. Even in medicine, in the UK they no longer prescribe expectorants because they don’t effect the course of a chest infection. The thing is that isn’t why most people took them, it was a comfort thing. Believe it or not I am in fact a rabid empiricist I just wonder if we are clear about what we mean in the language we use.

Geordie, I suggest you go to the Science Based Medicine blog and read the first few articles.
The overall methods and principles are very similar.

But evidence based medicine (EBM) gives top and almost complete importance to evidence from randomized controlled trials, even if the results are only marginally significant and contradict basic science.

Science based medicine (SBM) also places importance on such evidence, but tries to raise the importance of underlying scientific principles when deciding whether a medical treatment is truly effective.

Also, the process of science which relies on replication by different researchers has a built-in mechanism for coping, however slowly, with results that are merely due to bias and corruption.

A key difference between SBM/EBM and complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is that SBM eventually weeds out interventions like the expectorants you mentioned. CAM never seems to weed anything out and even includes contradictory treatments.

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