I have been quite sceptical about of the Reports in Newspapers on any thing connected with ‘Cure found’,”genes isolated’ ‘Coffe.tea causes cancer,inhibits(/) cancer’,’Experts say’ and the lot.
When you go deep you would find that the Story has bo basis except in the imagination of the writer.
And many atimes the reports quote some one called an Expert whom nobody seems to know!
And the University/Research facility is still mor difficult to find.
Even if you are able to find such institutions, you would get a reply that ‘the theory/cure is in experimental stage’
How many’cures’ have been found for cancer till date!
As also for AIDS!
The same trend applies to most of the reports on Life Style,Sex, Behaviour.
I came across a piece in Craked.com on the subject and I am reproducing here.
”
I was busy finishing up the draft of what was to be my latest column, “Everything About Sausages Is Awesome,” when someone pointed out to me that the only research I had done was creating 45 animated gifs of rotating sausages. “Avant garde,” I mumbled, waving my hands around in an authoritative manner. “Daring,” I added, waving my hands in a more daring manner, before concluding with, “you slope-browed idiot.” This, it turned out, is the wrong way to win an argument with an editor, much in the same way that it’s the wrong way to win an argument with everyone else.
So in order to find some sort of academic support for my deeply held belief that sausages are awesome, I went to the public library. My initial searches were frustrated by the fact that the academic community apparently has greatly neglected sausage-based research, and despite numerous queries — “Excuse me, you slope-browed idiot …” — I was unable to find the sausage section of the library at all. My only promising lead, a helpful elderly gentleman who led me to the washroom, turned out to be talking about something else entirely, and I was forced to leave the washroom empty-handed, though with my honor thankfully intact. (Being empty-handed actually kind of related to the intactness of my honor.)
Frustrated, I turned to the archived newspapers and periodicals and began reading their health sections to see what the popular media had to say about sausages. Although I found little advice about tubed meats, I did find a lot of other advice, almost all of it dangerously insane. There wasn’t a single article about nutrition or health that didn’t make massive, barely substantiated claims about a new diet or medical treatment. This kind of journalistic malpractice is perfectly acceptable for Cracked (company motto: Journalistic Malpractice Is Perfectly Acceptable Here), but I was surprised to see this kind of ass-grabbery in the grown-up newspapers.
#8. ____ Is Incredibly Good/Bad for You
Here’s a headline you’ve probably read a few times already today:

…
What these articles usually don’t do is qualify what exactly that “link” means. If you’re missing a discussion of:
– the cost of a diet/treatment,
– its side effects,
– how it compares with other treatments and
– how it compares with doing nothing at all,
… then you’re not reading very useful advice. Consider that last item for a second. Does a new diet reduce the risk of getting a disease from 5.4 percent to 5.2 percent? (I don’t know or care what the units could be. Riskometers, let’s say.) That is a potentially interesting finding, and it could certainly serve as a guide for future research, but it’s not the kind of evidence that should inspire you to cram fish oil into your throat until you stop blinking.
……
#5. Lack of Knowledge
Earlier I talked about choosing proper methodologies, and cost/benefit analysis, and literature review. These are just some of the terribly boring chores that are a sad but necessary part of being an expert in a field. That’s why we can’t expect reporters to be experts in all the areas they’re covering; it’s often the case these days that a new reporter who a month ago was writing the “Tides Update” on page G18 is promoted to covering something actually useful, even if he doesn’t know the first thing about it. And the easiest way for this reporter to write about something he doesn’t know is to find and cite an expert. It’s a safe play for our young reporter; by simply describing the expert’s credentials and then relaying what they’re saying, the reporter’s young, soft ass is covered. It’s the expert telling the story, not the reporter. So it’s up to the audience to figure out if the expert is:
– actually an expert.
– a hired stooge.
– two children atop each other’s shoulders in a long coat.

http://www.cracked.com/blog/8-lies-its-surprisingly-easy-to-tell-as-health-reporter_p2/
Related articles
- Len Richmond’s Film “What If Cannabis Cured Cancer” (buelahman.wordpress.com)
- Setback reported in research into cancer treatment (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- Is Cancer Outwitting ‘Personalized Medicine’? (news.health.com)
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