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Vaccines and climtae change. Are scientists failing to communicate science properly.

  • 21-09-2016 11:51am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭


    Interesting article from Guardian argueing that scientists are potentially fuelling the ant-vaxx and climate change movements by closing down arguments. The article goes on to state that what the "shut up and take the vaccine approach" some scientists have isn't communicating it's self affirmation. Are anti-vaxxers ect rejecting science or is it not being communicated properly?

    I don't believe in calling people stupid for what they subscribe to but I do believe scientific method is the best method we have. I do believe that the public should take part in science debates and should be able to question scientists though.




    A video did the rounds a couple of years ago, of some self-styled “skeptic”
    disagreeing – robustly, shall we say – with an anti-vaxxer. The speaker was
    roundly cheered by everyone sharing the video – he sure put that idiot in their
    place!

    Scientists love to argue. Cutting through bull**** and getting to the truth
    of the matter is pretty much the job description. So it’s not really surprising
    scientists and science supporters frequently take on those who dabble in
    homeopathy, or deny anthropogenic climate change, or who oppose vaccinations or
    genetically modified food.

    It makes sense. You’ve got a population that is – on the whole – not
    scientifically literate, and you want to persuade them that they should be doing
    a and b (but not c) so that they/you/their children can have a better life.


    Brian Cox was at it last week, performing a “smackdown” on a climate
    change denier
    on the ABC’s Q&A discussion program. He brought
    graphs! Knockout blow.

    And yet … it leaves me cold. Is this really what science communication is
    about? Is this informing, changing minds, winning people over to a better,
    brighter future?
    I doubt it somehow.
    There are a couple of things here. And I don’t think it’s as simple as people
    rejecting science.

    First, people don’t like being told what to do. This is part of what Michael
    Gove was driving at when he said people had had enough of experts. We rely on
    doctors and nurses to make us better, and on financial planners to help us
    invest. We expect scientists to research new cures for disease, or simply to
    find out how things work. We expect the government to try to do the best for
    most of the people most of the time, and weather forecasters to at least tell us
    what today was like even if they struggle with tomorrow.

    But when these experts tell us how to live our lives – or even worse, what to
    think – something rebels. Especially when there is even the merest whiff of
    controversy or uncertainty. Back in your box, we say, and stick to what you’re
    good at.
    We saw it in the recent referendum, we saw it when Dame Sally Davies said wine makes her think of
    breast cancer
    , and we saw it back in the late 1990s when the
    government of the time told people – who honestly, really wanted to do the best
    for their children – to shut up, stop asking questions and take the damn triple
    vaccine.
    Which brings us to the second thing.
    On the whole, I don’t think people who object to vaccines or GMOs are at
    heart anti-science. Some are, for sure, and these are the dangerous ones. But
    most people simply want to know that someone is listening, that someone is
    taking their worries seriously; that someone cares for them.


    It’s more about who we are and our relationships than about what is right or
    true.


    This is why, when you bring data to a TV show, you run the risk of appearing
    supercilious and judgemental. Even – especially – if you’re actually right.


    People want to feel wanted and loved. That there is someone who will listen
    to them. To feel part of a family.


    The physicist Sabine
    Hossenfelder
    gets this. Between contracts one time, she set up a “talk to a
    physicist
    ” service. Fifty dollars gets you 20 minutes with a quantum
    physicist … who will listen to whatever crazy idea you have, and help you
    understand a little more about the world.


    How many science communicators do you know who will take the time to listen
    to their audience? Who are willing to step outside their cosy little bubble and
    make an effort to reach people where they are, where they are confused and
    hurting; where they need?


    Atul Gawande says scientists
    should assert
    “the true facts of good science” and expose the “bad
    science tactics that are being used to mislead people”. But that’s only part of
    the story, and is closing the barn door too late.


    Because the charlatans have already recognised the need, and have built the
    communities that people crave. Tellingly, Gawande refers to the ‘scientific
    community’; and he’s absolutely right, there. Most science communication isn’t
    about persuading people; it’s self-affirmation for those already on the inside.
    Look at us, it says, aren’t we clever? We are exclusive, we are a gang, we are
    family.

    That’s not communication. It’s not changing minds and it’s certainly not
    winning hearts and minds.

    It’s tribalism.


«1

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 685 ✭✭✭FURET


    The problem is that people are stupid. They go through the education system and think they're educated. They're not. And the internet gives a platform for idiots to spread their ideas far and wide. Other idiots lap it up, because they are unable to think critically.


  • Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 23,238 Mod ✭✭✭✭GLaDOS


    The information is there and has been communicated in various different formats of non-scientific, friendly language over and over and over again.

    Some people just don't want to believe it.

    Some people are happy to misrepresent the situation to suit their own needs and take advantage of the above.

    Cake, and grief counseling, will be available at the conclusion of the test



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,452 ✭✭✭✭The_Valeyard


    Suppose nowadays there is so much information out there, it can be difficult to ascertain or decide which is the truth and which is bullsh*t.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    Suppose nowadays there is so much information out there, it can be difficult to ascertain or decide which is the truth and which is bullsh*t.

    Diesel is clean! And good for the environment!
    Diesel is good for you!

    Climate change is here, better buy diesel!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,737 ✭✭✭✭kylith


    I suppose that after years of politely engaging and explaining that yes, climate change is a real thing that we should worry about and no, vaccines don't cause autism one's patience can start wearing thin and one can get a bit snippy. Especially when dealing with people who are wilfully misinformed and who refuse to educate themselves.


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  • Posts: 25,611 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    It's hard answering a kid who won't stop asking a stupid question over and over no matter how you explain the simple answer to them. It's harder still when an apparent adult with responsibility over kids won't stop asking a stupid question over and over and will go to great lengths to find any other source to disprove your answer no matter how you explain the simple answer to them.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 60,217 Mod ✭✭✭✭Wibbs


    FURET wrote: »
    The problem is that people are stupid.
    +1 Any extended debate will eventually circle around to F's post.

    Rejoice in the awareness of feeling stupid, for that’s how you end up learning new things. If you’re not aware you’re stupid, you probably are.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,516 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    No people are just fvcking retards who will take the easier track of believing what they want to instead of changing their opinions in the face of overwhelming science and facts.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Read an interesting take recently on the anti vaccine argument and "availability cascades"

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Availability_cascade


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 24,465 ✭✭✭✭darkpagandeath


    I think you are confused. for one there is nothing we can currently do about natural climate change. I think this is where people get mixed up. You should say Anthropogenic climate change which is a whole different kettle of fish.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    VinLieger wrote: »
    No people are just fvcking retards who will take the easier track of believing what they want to instead of changing their opinions in the face of overwhelming science and facts.

    What, are you saying diesel isn't clean? Or that the environmentalists were wrong about that science, but right about the other sciences?

    Diesel Switch Cheers Greens!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,516 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    What, are you saying diesel isn't clean? Or that the environmentalists were wrong about that science, but right about the other sciences?

    Diesel Switch Cheers Greens!

    Didnt say a word about diesel and have no opinion on it but thanks for the article


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,358 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    Science and scientists are notoriously bad at communication with the public. And historically it was even seen as poor form to even try. Carl Sagan was one of the forerunners of changing this dynamic.... but he suffered a lot of derision and hostility within the scientific community for doing so.

    This IS changing, albeit slowly, with more and more people making a career out of science communication. And popular bloggers on the subject. And popular TV shows, including a Neil DeGrasse Tyson fronted resurrection of Carl Sagans Cosmos. While the likes of Richard Dawkins writes lay man books on science consumable by the average public, and many more like him, translating complex scientific concepts and claims into easy but often beautiful Vernacular English.

    But a problem, decried by many like Ben Goldacre, is a lot of our science, findings, advancements and the like are communicated not by scientists but science journalists. Journalists that THEMSELVES have little to no scientific background of any kind and simply do not understand what it is they themselves are presuming to report on.

    And since this is the source of much of the science the public gets, we have an awful dynamic there. Especially when such journalists are also compelled to spin a finding to fulfil click bait or the like. Take the recent "Bacon causes cancer" stories and compare those stories to the ACTUAL claims of the papers and research behind them.

    And to compound this, statistics are presented in such a fantastical way as to render them useless. If something shifts you from a 0,000001% of getting cancer to 0,000005% chance.... this is MINUTE.... but the average news paper article will tell you "This increases your chance of cancer by 500%!!!!!" which.... while pedantically correct..... is certainly misleading.

    And all of this is compound by people who make a career and win actual respect for being anti-intellectualism. If you slight science and scientists and evidence based research in some circles, this GAINS you respect. Why only this week, following comments about Lunar Tidal mechanisms, a UKIP member told us that the people are sick to death of "experts".

    And he likely said that knowing full well that there is a section of people who will jump around in rapturous applause at his perceived "burn" of the intellectual. Yea you go and you SHOW those scientists with their evidence and substantiation and knowledge, you big sexy man you.
    Suppose nowadays there is so much information out there, it can be difficult to ascertain or decide which is the truth and which is bullsh*t.

    It can. But I think a lot of that is our fault too. For example I went through the Irish Scientific Syllabus. I did it in Primary School. And then I did it with Physics, Biology and Applied Maths in Secondary school.

    At NO point in the process was I educated on how to read, interpret, critique or write a scientific study or a statistical analysis. I knew nothing of the scientific method in and of itself. I knew nothing of the techniques and methodologies of things like Epidemiology. Falsification. Scientific Prediction. Double blind. Replication. All these methodologies were alien to me entirely.

    And I made a point of having a few chats with people coming out of UCD and DCU science courses..... and they did not fare much better than I did either.

    And now that I am more than moderately versed in these things I CAN apply some significant amount of discernment between what is bull and what is credible when I trawl through the information out there.

    "Teaching Science" in our curriculum is done remarkably poorly. We tend to just learn facts by rote, without anything behind them of any utility. We learn the basics structures by rote of a cell in an amoeba or algae, without learning anything of the roots of cellular biology. We learn the name of the planets by rote, without learning anything about the classification systems and methodology of astronomical science.

    "We live in an age based on science and technology with formidable scientific powers, and if we do not understand it.... we the general public.... then who is making all the decisions about science and technology that determines the future our children will live in? Members of our congress? There is no more than a handful of them who have any background in science at all. We have arranged a society based on science and technology in which no one understands anything about it. And this combustable mixture of ignorance and power, sooner or later, will blow up in our faces. Who IS running science and technology in a democracy if the people do not know anything about it?

    Science is more than a body of knowledge, it is a way of thinking, or evaluating the universe with a fine understanding of human fallibility. And if we are not able to ask skeptical questions of those who tell us what is true, to be skeptical of those in authority, then we are up for grabs to the next chalatan who comes ambling along. Jefferson himself said 'It is not enough to enshrine some rights in a constitution or a bill of rights.... the people have to be educated in order than we run the government not the government running us'"
    .


    Carl Sagan


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    VinLieger wrote: »
    Didnt say a word about diesel and have no opinion on it but thanks for the article

    I'm just highlighting that the same people who bring us irrefutable science FACT! to support X Y and Z also brought us science FACT! that diesel is good for us.

    Bit of a credibility boo boo for them all the same.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,516 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    I'm just highlighting that the same people who bring us irrefutable science FACT! to support X Y and Z also brought us science FACT! that diesel is good for us.

    Bit of a credibility boo boo for them all the same.

    The greens are nutters sure I wouldnt believe a word they say, also I don't recall anyone ever saying diesel was good for us, just possibly it was better than petrol? I could be wrong though


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,690 ✭✭✭✭Skylinehead


    VinLieger wrote: »
    The greens are nutters sure I wouldnt believe a word they say, also I don't recall anyone ever saying diesel was good for us, just possibly it was better than petrol? I could be wrong though

    The Green Party were fixated on CO2 when they pushed for the motor tax change. Diesel does emit less CO2 than petrol, so yay there, but they completely ignored that in other respects, such as nitrogen dioxide, diesel is far more poisonous and filthy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    VinLieger wrote: »
    The greens are nutters sure I wouldnt believe a word they say
    Fair enough. On a local level I guess they are just parroting things "this is bad, this is good" without any scientific analysis. Would the bajillion scientists who subscribe to climate change not have given anyone a heads up that diesel wasn't all fairydust and sparkles though? Just happy with the cheap motor tax and fuel bill maybe?

    On an international level though the scientists and action groups must be a bit more ammm... scientific and less open to being manipulated into supporting random codology? Carbon credit trading gonna save us all?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,516 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    Fair enough. On a local level I guess they are just parroting things "this is bad, this is good" without any scientific analysis. Would the bajillion scientists who subscribe to climate change not have given anyone a heads up that diesel wasn't all fairydust and sparkles though? Just happy with the cheap motor tax and fuel bill maybe?

    On an international level though the scientists and action groups must be a bit more ammm... scientific and less open to being manipulated into supporting random codology? Carbon credit trading gonna save us all?

    The problem is they arent listened to at an international level, carbon credit trading is a politicians and bureaucrats invention


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,116 ✭✭✭RDM_83 again


    I think you are confused. for one there is nothing we can currently do about natural climate change. I think this is where people get mixed up. You should say Anthropogenic climate change which is a whole different kettle of fish.

    This! Saying people disbelieve climate change isn't helpful, nobody disbelieves that the climate changes they disagree that humans are having a significant or measurable impact.
    Then there is the thing that maybe we're having a significant impact but the natural cycle would be as harmful to western civilization. Like all we're doing at the minute is living in a warm inter-glacial period.

    The same with vaccines, no they don't cause autism but some vaccines have been harmful to (generally very tiny minorities) of people.

    To me this is the major issue, its not communication from the scientific community/experts that are the cause of this issue, its the filtering through media types or vocal individuals thats the issue. Take something like the cervical cancer vaccine thing, the actually developers of the vaccine were much less gushy, restrained and pointed out issues with the vaccines spectrum of protection than than the media pundits and posters etc.

    Somebody saying- Vaccines are harmless - bigs up they're "rational" kudos but as we know thats not the case somebody with a skeptical mindset will look at that statement and find it false and they will grow to distrust many statements.
    Its a lot less sexy and karma/thanks-worthy saying.
    All modern vaccines have been through a process to find if they are safe as they can possibly be, yes there is a tiny possibility they will cause a negative reaction and because of the huge numbers vaccinated some people may suffer negatively but this is so outweighed greatly by the protection against disease and epidemic that it brings.

    Edit: obviously I'm for vaccines, and I think we should reduce CO2 outputs but I'm pretty hesitant of the methods put forward, fullscale social restructuring seems more likely to be needed rather than buying a prius


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MMR_vaccine_controversy
    It was the biggest science story of 2002, with 1257 articles mostly written by non-expert commentators. In the period January to September 2002, 32% of the stories written about MMR mentioned Leo Blair, as opposed to only 25% which mentioned Wakefield. Less than a third of the stories mentioned the overwhelming evidence that MMR is safe.[15] The paper, press conference and video sparked a major health scare in the United Kingdom. As a result of the scare, full confidence in MMR fell from 59% to 41% after publication of the Wakefield research. In 2001, 26% of family doctors felt the government had failed to prove there was no link between MMR and autism and bowel disease.[49] In his book Bad Science, Ben Goldacre describes the MMR vaccine scare as one of the "three all-time classic bogus science stories" by the British newspapers (the other two are the Arpad Pusztai affair about genetically modified crops, and Chris Malyszewicz and the MRSA hoax).[50]

    We also live in the "post-fact" age - the age of strident opinion from all sides. Which is why Donald Trump is in with a shout of being the President of the USA and Obama being an African born Muslim is believed to be the truth by many. Modern infotainment media is voracious and will, like paper and ink, broadcast any old tosh if it grabs an audience.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    Andrew Wakefield also raises an interesting point. Sometimes the experts have led the anti-science movements and give mixed advice. Microbiologists are currently warning of microbial resistance and this is filtered down to patients who are told to finish a course of antibiotics. The problem is that some doctors are also miss-prescribing antibiotics, which sends mixed signals.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,786 ✭✭✭wakka12


    It just boggles my mind that grown adults will put their childs life at risk, theres no evidence to believe that vaccines do anything other than cure diseases, like literally none, so why is there even any sizeable group of people who believe this rumour for no apparent reason? just everything about anti vaxx is insane


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    wakka12 wrote: »
    It just boggles my mind that grown adults will put their childs life at risk, theres no evidence to believe that vaccines do anything other than cure diseases, like literally none, so why is there even any sizeable group of people who believe this rumour for no apparent reason? just everything about anti vaxx is insane
    The same with vaccines, no they don't cause autism but some vaccines have been harmful to (generally very tiny minorities) of people.

    To me this is the major issue, its not communication from the scientific community/experts that are the cause of this issue, its the filtering through media types or vocal individuals thats the issue. Take something like the cervical cancer vaccine thing, the actually developers of the vaccine were much less gushy, restrained and pointed out issues with the vaccines spectrum of protection than than the media pundits and posters etc.

    Somebody saying- Vaccines are harmless - bigs up they're "rational" kudos but as we know thats not the case somebody with a skeptical mindset will look at that statement and find it false and they will grow to distrust many statements.
    Its a lot less sexy and karma/thanks-worthy saying.
    All modern vaccines have been through a process to find if they are safe as they can possibly be, yes there is a tiny possibility they will cause a negative reaction and because of the huge numbers vaccinated some people may suffer negatively but this is so outweighed greatly by the protection against disease and epidemic that it brings.

    Edit: obviously I'm for vaccines,...

    I'm a lot happier with RDM_83 again's version of communicating science tbh.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,516 ✭✭✭✭VinLieger


    steddyeddy wrote: »
    Andrew Wakefield also raises an interesting point. should be tried for manslaughter

    Fixed it for you


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,423 ✭✭✭✭Outlaw Pete


    Sure, they are bad at communicating their findings at times but they are also guilty of misusing them and deliberately misrepresenting them too and mostly for profit

    Those who use science as a battering ram in online discussions (and at the odd dinner party too no doubt) are wont to regularly cite Ben Goldacre's book 'Bad Science' (a great book) but they rarely if ever point out that Ben wrote another great book called 'Bad Pharma' and if you read it you will soon find that miscommunication of the scientific community is the least of fcuking worries.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,358 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    wakka12 wrote: »
    so why is there even any sizeable group of people who believe this rumour for no apparent reason? just everything about anti vaxx is insane

    I guess because it appeals to an emotional reality in us that is not so much insanity, as merely subjective.

    The "trolley problem" in ethics for example can represent this. You can frame the EXACT SAME problem in different ways, and get different results.

    And the reason for that, and for the vaccination issue, is it appeals to an "Action-Inaction" sentiment in us where we place higher ethical value on action than inaction.

    So while the evidence that vaccinations cause long term damage is non-existent.... and while the (very real) possibility of immediate side effects are statistically highly unlikely........ those parents are still left with this natural feeling that action is more "ethically weighted" than inaction.

    And so they prefer subjectively not to vaccinate (inaction) over the more beneficial but still BARELY risky choice to vaccinate (action). And anything, even entirely falsified or imaginary science, that exacerbates that natural tendency in us.... is going to lead parents down the wrong pathway.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,116 ✭✭✭RDM_83 again


    So while the evidence that vaccinations cause long term damage is non-existent.... and while the (very real) possibility of immediate side effects are statistically highly unlikely........ those parents are still left with this natural feeling that action is more "ethically weighted" than inaction.

    While I agree with what you've said broadly whats highlighted is exactly my point about statements that can quickly be proved false leading one to start doubting the entirety of the statement.
    Like this is from the guardian showing long term damage by vaccines so its going to pop up if somebody even takes a cursory glance online about this.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/jun/10/boy-wins-120000-damages-narcolepsy-swine-flu-vaccine-glaxosmithkline


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    While I agree with what you've said broadly whats highlighted is exactly my point about statements that can quickly be proved false leading one to start doubting the entirety of the statement.
    Like this is from the guardian showing long term damage by vaccines so its going to pop up if somebody even takes a cursory glance online about this.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/jun/10/boy-wins-120000-damages-narcolepsy-swine-flu-vaccine-glaxosmithkline

    To me the "everyone should buy diesel to help combat climate change, diesel is clean" hype is another example of this... actual, responsible environmental initiatives will suffer due to stupid stuff like "diesel is clean". It even makes people doubt climate change due to the association.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,358 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    While I agree with what you've said broadly whats highlighted is exactly my point about statements that can quickly be proved false leading one to start doubting the entirety of the statement.

    Indeed, point well taken, but reading the article one notes that this was a "court ruling" not a scientific one, and the article ends by pointing out that the association between the vaccine and the condition is something they are "actively researching". In other words this is not the evidence of which I was speaking. The link, according to that article, is still merely an assumed one.

    But I grant you that sweeping statements are an issue of our language. It is just how we talk. I am usually hyper aware of this and I usually modify, where I feel it prudent, any such statements I find into more cushioned ones and actually I was on my way back to do so here TOO but you beat me to it. :D I really just had Autism in mind when I was writing it.

    But the point I am making remains the same before or after such an edit. Statistically the chances of vaccinating your child having a detrimental side effect............. let alone the effects (autism for example) some people have been told it will have................ is less than "small". And even when some are observed, they turn out to often be coincidental. Which is a statistical obvious point given the large number of people who are vaccinated.... some people are statistically going to develop SOME condition around the same time. And those people are likely to be prone to link the two causally.

    But emotionally and ethically our species seems to weight action heavier than inaction, and the active positive action of injecting something into your child therefore holds more weight than doing nothing.

    So anything, even misinformation, that feeds into that will carry a lot of weight with people. And it is for this reason, rather than mere "insanity" that so many parents are prone to buy into what the anti vacc people are selling. It simply resonates on a level that bypasses any rigorous application of intellect.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    While I agree with what you've said broadly whats highlighted is exactly my point about statements that can quickly be proved false leading one to start doubting the entirety of the statement.
    Like this is from the guardian showing long term damage by vaccines so its going to pop up if somebody even takes a cursory glance online about this.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/jun/10/boy-wins-120000-damages-narcolepsy-swine-flu-vaccine-glaxosmithkline

    But it's one thing to go from that, which seems to have empirical evidence behind it to the anti- MMR vaccine movement which has zero evidence behind it. It is quite right to say that the claims by Andrew Wakefield and some anti-vaxxers have no scientific basis.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,564 ✭✭✭✭steddyeddy


    Court rulings are not scientific evidence and have no bearing on the scientific credibility of anything whatsoever.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    wakka12 wrote: »
    It just boggles my mind that grown adults will put their childs life at risk, theres no evidence to believe that vaccines do anything other than cure diseases, like literally none, so why is there even any sizeable group of people who believe this rumour for no apparent reason? just everything about anti vaxx is insane

    What was particularly interesting about the MMR vaccine rate drop off was that it was most pronounced in post codes which had the highest incomes and level of education. The guardian/times reading middle classes thought they knew better than the NHS and the medical science establishment and that Wakefield was some sort of rogue hero for exposing a supposed truth - 'clever enough to know just enough to be quite wrong'


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    steddyeddy wrote: »
    Court rulings are not scientific evidence and have no bearing on the scientific credibility of anything whatsoever.

    To me it's scientifically incredible and statistically unlikely that any one vaccine/medicine is absolutely safe for everyone.

    I'm perfectly happy with the less warm and fuzzy descriptions of vaccine risks.
    Statistically likely that a miniscule number of people will suffer some something else coincidentally.
    Statistically likely that a miniscule number of people will suffer an actual side effect.

    If they just said "you'd be more likely to win the lotto every week for a year than suffer a side effect to established vaccines" it might work better than "it's absolutely safe, and even if it wasn't you can't prove it, shut up and take it"


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,116 ✭✭✭RDM_83 again


    steddyeddy wrote: »
    But it's one thing to go from that, which seems to have empirical evidence behind it to the anti- MMR vaccine movement which has zero evidence behind it. It is quite right to say that the claims by Andrew Wakefield and some anti-vaxxers have no scientific basis.

    Oh I completely agree with nozzferrahhtoo's point that we tend to be rationally irrational, my view is that we have to make sure the "logical/scientific" makes a much higher standard of statement/claim all the time because if we don't people will seize on the tiny amount of cases to disprove in their minds the entire field.

    Also at times peoples skepticism of governmental statements on health issues is justified, I was a kid for the BSE/CJD stuff but its a good example of financial interests taking precedence over public health. I know CJD didn't turn into an epidemic but AFAIK thats only because we're more resistant to Prion diseases than previously thought there was legitimate fears of 100,000's of deaths considering the amount of infected carcasses that entered the food cycle.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,534 ✭✭✭✭Dohnjoe


    To me the "everyone should buy diesel to help combat climate change, diesel is clean" hype

    What hype?

    It's just known as slightly less polluting than petrol. And even that's up for debate now


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 18,299 ✭✭✭✭The Backwards Man


    Scientists are like soccer bores in the pub, you never see them scoring but they are always on hand to tell you why someone else didn't.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,569 ✭✭✭Special Circumstances


    Dohnjoe wrote: »
    What hype?

    It's just known as slightly less polluting than petrol. And even that's up for debate now
    :pac: :D :pac: I like it! Post factual world indeed!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 40,061 ✭✭✭✭Harry Palmr


    Scientists are like soccer bores in the pub, you never see them scoring but they are always on hand to tell you why someone else didn't.

    Yeah, that's why we are living in caves with scurvy of course....science in our lives is like air - invisible and all around us.


  • Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 23,238 Mod ✭✭✭✭GLaDOS


    Scientists are like soccer bores in the pub, you never see them scoring but they are always on hand to tell you why someone else didn't.
    Einstein was notorious for his affairs, while Steven Hawking has married 3 times.

    Scientists are filthy animals :pac:

    Cake, and grief counseling, will be available at the conclusion of the test



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,639 ✭✭✭andekwarhola


    There's never been a time in history where information has been more freely available to people of all social classes and incomes.

    The problem is that large swathes of the population are retarded.


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  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 40,545 CMod ✭✭✭✭ancapailldorcha


    I think the problem is a combination of Homophilous sorting by which people customise their various feeds and information they're exposed to to information which suits their tastes as opposed to anything that might challenge their opinions and prejudices. The other factor is what Nobel prize-winning author Daniel Kahneman refers to as "Cognitive ease" whereby people accept whichever explanation is simplest. It's much easier to believe that in a lab somewhere is a syringe full of magic, side effect-free cancer cure than to learn about the complex, tightly regulated process by which cells divide and why targeting tumours is so difficult when one wishes to minimise side effects.

    The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God.

    Leviticus 19:34



  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 28,146 Mod ✭✭✭✭Podge_irl


    Sure, they are bad at communicating their findings at times but they are also guilty of misusing them and deliberately misrepresenting them too and mostly for profit

    I'm sure some of them are, because ultimately they are people after all and some of them will happily fudge science for money. This is the point of things like peer review but no system is infallible. And peer review doesn't really cover how you explain a scientific finding which leaves room for deliberately misrepresenting it.

    However the vast majority of scientists who sensationalise or somewhat misrepresent their research do it because of the completely non-functional funding system we have in place where funding is based on immediate results and decided by non-scientists. If they don't discover a monetisable idea, or something that can somehow be spun that way, they will often find themselves with no means to do any research at all.

    Science communication is flawed because it is being disseminated often by people who do not fully understand it. And those that do often struggle to describe it in ways that are comprehensible (and that is actually fine - as Feynman supposedly said "Hell, if I could explain it to the average person, it wouldn't have been worth the Nobel prize."). But beyond that, we are in serious danger of having a flawed scientific system in general.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,881 ✭✭✭Kurtosis


    steddyeddy wrote: »
    Court rulings are not scientific evidence and have no bearing on the scientific credibility of anything whatsoever.

    But the problem is most people are not able to critically appraise evidence or differentiate between reliable and unreliable sources. These are skills which take time and effort to learn/develop. I think we need to do a better job at educating people about the scientific method and research more generally, ideally starting in school.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,935 ✭✭✭Anita Blow


    I think with the likes of antibiotic resistance it's a case of tragedy of the commons. People can generally see the broader dangers of overuse of antibiotics because there's various education campaigns and have been told by their GP at some point about its risks, but when it comes down to it they only care about their own situation. So they might know why it's important to finish a course of antibiotics but when they're actually on a course and start to feel better then continuing to take them feels like an inconvenience so they stop. Or they may know that antibiotics shouldn't be required for throat infections, but if they develop an infection then they feel they're an exception and really need it for XYZ. No amount of education is going to change that because it's a case of blissful ignorance.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,358 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    steddyeddy wrote: »
    But it's one thing to go from that, which seems to have empirical evidence behind it to the anti- MMR vaccine movement which has zero evidence behind it.

    It is a huge leap indeed, and a fallacious one. But it IS one people are prone to make. RDM_83 again does have a point. When people read a statement, that in 30 seconds they can show to be false, they start to doubt the rest of the message.

    So yea I was PEDANTICALLY, if not statistically, incorrect to say that vaccines do not cause long term side effects. They likely do in a tiny MINORITY of cases. And I take the point we should be careful with our language there as if doubt can be called into the language I use, then doubt can be called into the entire message I would be using it to spread.

    But it is an issue with our language, but that is a different topic, that we TALK in absolutely when we are CLOSE to that absolute. For example I might say, off the cuff, "There is no god" and someone might (rightly) call me on the fact I have no evidence for that. At which point I would have to go into nauseating length that I mean there is no evidence for a god, no reason to think there is one, and we have plenty of evidence that goes AGAINST the idea there is a god or after life.... even though we can not conclusively say there is not one.

    And people are prone, sometimes genuinely and sometimes maliciously and contrived, to mis-read into absolute statements as suits their agenda and narrative.
    To me it's scientifically incredible and statistically unlikely that any one vaccine/medicine is absolutely safe for everyone.

    Indeed, given that even the things we consider most conducive to life.... say water or sunlight..... are not "absolutely safe for everyone". If everything from Aquagenic urticaria to Photosensitivity show us that not even the basic units of life are not safe for "everyone".... then it would be ludicrous to expect artificial vaccinations would be either!
    Scientists are like soccer bores in the pub, you never see them scoring but they are always on hand to tell you why someone else didn't.

    Yea because scientists never deliver anything, never show results, never advance our knowledge or technology.... and are just all round ineffectual in every way, right?

    Maybe we should get a priest to pray over us instead or something, because mumbling on your knees.... now THAT shows results.
    There's never been a time in history where information has been more freely available to people of all social classes and incomes. The problem is that large swathes of the population are retarded.

    Disingenuous to say the least. The problem is not the mental failings of the masses, but the educational failings of our state. We get people in our education curriculum to learn details by rote. We never seem to teach them how to obtain, parse, interpret and process information.

    Making information freely available is great. It is the wonder of our age and is the mecca of the intellectual.

    But it is pointless and a lame horse in a race if we do not teach people what to do with that data. All the data in the world will do nothing for someone who does not know what to do with it.
    I think the problem is a combination of Homophilous sorting by which people customise their various feeds and information they're exposed to to information which suits their tastes as opposed to anything that might challenge their opinions and prejudices.

    Indeed, that is why I worship.... if I can be said to worship anything.... the art of discourse and debate. Because I enter into debate not to go "Look how right I think I am" but to say "please show me where I am wrong by challenging the robust defense of my preconceptions that I make".

    Through debate with others we do the exact opposite of selecting "feeds" that conform to our already held biases.
    penguin88 wrote: »
    But the problem is most people are not able to critically appraise evidence or differentiate between reliable and unreliable sources.

    Exactly and that is tragic because teaching at least the basics of this is not difficult. It should be a foundational corner stone of our early educational curriculum. There really is no reason why it should not be.

    But we seem to prefer to teach people facts, rather than teach them how to find, parse, interpret, and process facts.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,475 ✭✭✭Elliott S


    FURET wrote: »
    The problem is that people are stupid.

    There something more to it than this that I can't put my finger on because some anti-vaxxers and climate change deniers are evidently far from stupid. It's not stupidity but I don't know how to categorise it. I think to dismiss it as stupidity only means that we can't take high profile people in these movements on.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,412 ✭✭✭✭endacl


    Everyone's an expert. An Internet full of information + a dollop of dunning-Kruger effect = https://pics.onsizzle.com/well-son-when-you-were-a-baby-the-internet-and-2582445.png


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,313 ✭✭✭✭Sam Kade


    Elliott S wrote: »
    There something more to it than this that I can't put my finger on because some anti-vaxxers and climate change deniers are evidently far from stupid. It's not stupidity but I don't know how to categorise it. I think to dismiss it as stupidity only means that we can't take high profile people in these movements on.

    Nobody denies climate change the climate is always changing.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,475 ✭✭✭Elliott S


    Sam Kade wrote: »
    Nobody denies climate change the climate is always changing.

    That's weather you're thinking of. Many people deny the greater trend of climate change or rather than it is being hastened by manmade causes.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    It is a good question, but it needs to asks why are individual attracted to the non scientific explanation in the first place.


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