Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments

In 2009, the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee (STC) conducted an ‘evidence check’ on homeopathy to evaluate evidence for its effectiveness. In common with the wider literature critical of homeopathy, the STC report seems to endorse many of the strong claims that are made about it...

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Main Author: Turner, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer Netherlands 2017
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author Turner, A
author_facet Turner, A
author_sort Turner, A
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description In 2009, the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee (STC) conducted an ‘evidence check’ on homeopathy to evaluate evidence for its effectiveness. In common with the wider literature critical of homeopathy, the STC report seems to endorse many of the strong claims that are made about its implausibility. In contrast with the critical literature, however, the STC report explicitly does not place any weight on implausibility in its evaluation. I use the contrasting positions of the STC and the wider critical literature to examine the ‘implausibility arguments’ against homeopathy and the place of such arguments within evidence-based medicine (EBM). I argue that the STC report undervalues its strong claims about the mechanistic plausibility of homeopathy because it relies on a misunderstanding about the role of mechanistic evidence within EBM. This is not a conclusion for a revision of the role mechanistic evidence plays within EBM, however. It is a conclusion about the inconsistency of the STC report’s position towards implausibility arguments, given the evidential claims they endorse and the atypical situation that homeopathy presents. It provides a further example of the general point that mechanistic reasoning should not be seen as providing categorically lower quality evidence.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a79e92b8-15d6-41b3-bed4-67c69e773de02022-03-27T02:55:49ZEvaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatmentsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a79e92b8-15d6-41b3-bed4-67c69e773de0EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordSpringer Netherlands2017Turner, AIn 2009, the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee (STC) conducted an ‘evidence check’ on homeopathy to evaluate evidence for its effectiveness. In common with the wider literature critical of homeopathy, the STC report seems to endorse many of the strong claims that are made about its implausibility. In contrast with the critical literature, however, the STC report explicitly does not place any weight on implausibility in its evaluation. I use the contrasting positions of the STC and the wider critical literature to examine the ‘implausibility arguments’ against homeopathy and the place of such arguments within evidence-based medicine (EBM). I argue that the STC report undervalues its strong claims about the mechanistic plausibility of homeopathy because it relies on a misunderstanding about the role of mechanistic evidence within EBM. This is not a conclusion for a revision of the role mechanistic evidence plays within EBM, however. It is a conclusion about the inconsistency of the STC report’s position towards implausibility arguments, given the evidential claims they endorse and the atypical situation that homeopathy presents. It provides a further example of the general point that mechanistic reasoning should not be seen as providing categorically lower quality evidence.
spellingShingle Turner, A
Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
title Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
title_full Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
title_fullStr Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
title_short Evaluating the UK House of Commons Science and Technology Committee’s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
title_sort evaluating the uk house of commons science and technology committee s position on the implausible effectiveness of homeopathic treatments
work_keys_str_mv AT turnera evaluatingtheukhouseofcommonsscienceandtechnologycommitteespositionontheimplausibleeffectivenessofhomeopathictreatments