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	<title>Association for Science and Reason &#187; Homeopathy</title>
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		<title>Skeptics chair survives &#8216;homeopathic suicide&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.scienceandreason.ca/news/skeptics-chair-survives-homeopathic-suicide/</link>
		<comments>http://www.scienceandreason.ca/news/skeptics-chair-survives-homeopathic-suicide/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Dec 2007 18:55:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ASR Resources Department</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Alternative Medicine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homeopathy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.skepticscanada.org/?p=35</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Skeptics Canada chair Eric McMillan says he feels just fine. Some might be surprised he is even alive—a week after publicly downing the entire contents of three containers of homeopathic remedies, including a supposed arsenic alum. McMillan took the massive overdoses as part of an event to launch the organization&#8217;s year-long campaign on Complementary and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Skeptics Canada chair Eric McMillan says he feels          just fine.</p>
<p>Some might be surprised he is even alive—a week          after publicly downing the entire contents of three containers of          homeopathic remedies, including a supposed arsenic alum.</p>
<p><span id="more-35"></span></p>
<p>McMillan took the massive overdoses as part of an          event to launch the organization&#8217;s year-long campaign on Complementary          and Alternative Medicine (CAM). The meeting featured York University          professor Michael De Robertis presenting the history and research into          homeopathy, as well as award-winning journalists Paul Benedetti and          Wayne MacPhail reporting on their investigations into chiropractic and          other alternative medical treatments.</p>
<p>The audience gasped as halfway through the meeting          McMillan displayed three homeopathic products, opened the packages and          tilted the contents of all—including a bottle of liquid, a dispenser of          granules and three tubes of caplets— into his mouth, adding only a          little water to help him swallow them.</p>
<p>&#8220;I wanted to dramatically demonstrate the          ineffectiveness of these so-called remedies,&#8221; he said afterwards.</p>
<p>According to homeopathic theory and practice, the          effective agents in the remedies are diluted by their makers to the          point that it is unlikely that even a molecule remains, but &#8220;water          memory&#8221; is supposed to help the diluted substance retain its curative          properties.</p>
<p>Despite warnings from the products&#8217; manufacturers          about overdosing, the three selected for the demonstration contained no          active ingredients, McMillan said.</p>
<p>&#8220;I was told that if they were effective, I would          start feeling ill within one to two hours.&#8221; However, he completed          hosting the meeting. And seven days later he reports no ill effects at          all. &#8220;Not even a twinge.&#8221;</p>
<p>However, McMillan does not recommend anyone else          try this experiment on their own.</p>
<p>&#8220;We researched the products beforehand and I          consulted with a pharmacist about the particular ingredients in the          three I decided to take,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Even if the advertised active          ingredients are not actually present in mixtures, homeopathic products          are often filled out with other substances that I understand may cause a          reaction if taken in large doses.&#8221;</p>
<p>He also experimented with other samples of the          products earlier to ensure he would not have an allergic or other          reaction to the ingredients at the meeting.</p>
<p>Nor was the demonstration offered as a controlled,          scientific experiment examining the effectiveness of homeopathic          products in preventing or curing disease, he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;Skeptics Canada is calling for all such products          to be tested for efficacy, with scientific evaluation meeting the same          empirical standards that all medical remedies should meet,&#8221; said the          chairperson.</p>
<p>&#8220;This was just a little dramatization to bring home          the lack of understanding about these products.&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Water memory tests all wet: A reassessment of the Benveniste experiments by a D.V.M.</title>
		<link>http://www.scienceandreason.ca/pseudoscience/alternativemedicine/water-memory-tests-all-wet/</link>
		<comments>http://www.scienceandreason.ca/pseudoscience/alternativemedicine/water-memory-tests-all-wet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Aug 2007 19:20:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Howard J. Scrimgeour</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Alternative Medicine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Homeopathy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.skepticscanada.org/?p=73</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An issue of Ontario Skeptic contained a letter from Paul Greenwood, (&#8220;Science is open to radical, new ideas&#8221;) reporting on the &#8220;water memory&#8221; experiments of Dr. J. Benveniste, and offering the publication of these experiments as evidence of the willingness of the scientific community to examine new and unconventional ideas. As most skeptics will realize, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An issue of <em>Ontario Skeptic</em> contained a letter from Paul Greenwood, (&#8220;Science is open to radical, new  ideas&#8221;) reporting on the &#8220;water memory&#8221; experiments of Dr. J. Benveniste, and  offering the publication of these experiments as evidence of the willingness of  the scientific community to examine new and unconventional ideas.</p>
<p><span id="more-73"></span></p>
<p>As most skeptics will realize, the claim  that solutions can retain their effect when diluted many times, and indeed that  the effect increases with dilution, is one of the fundamental tenets of the  fringe medicine of homeopathy, but runs contrary to current knowledge in  chemistry and biology. The results of this experiment, if validated, would  therefore have lent credence to the claims of homeopaths.</p>
<p>However, additional information has  come to light which forces us to reassess this research and its publication.</p>
<p>The initial report appeared in the June 30,  1988 issue of the British journal <em>Nature, </em>Vol. 333. Its results were sufficiently unusual that the editor of <em>Nature</em> began  that issue with an editorial titled, &#8220;When to believe the unbelievable&#8221;. It is  worth quoting extensively from that editorial:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Inexplicable observations are not always  signs of the supernatural. That is what readers of the remarkable article on  page 816 should keep in mind. They should also remember that Avogadro&#8217;s number, the number of molecules in a gram molecule of material is roughly UR1021, which naturally implies that most of the experiments with antibody solution reported by Professor Benveniste and his  colleagues have been carried out in the literal absence of antibody molecules.  For what the article shows is that it is possible to dilute an aqueous solution  of an antibody virtually indefinitely without the solution losing its biological  activity. Or rather, there is a surprising rhythmic fluctuation in the activity of  the solution. At some dilutions, the activity falls off; on further dilution,  it is restored.</p>
<p>There is no objective explanation of these observations. Nor is there much  comfort for anybody in the explanation offered at the end of the article that  antibody molecules once embodied in water leave their internal marks, as ghosts  of a kind, on its molecular structure for there is no evidence of any other kind  to suggest that such behaviour may be within the bounds of possibility&#8230;.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Certainly there can be no justification, at this stage, for an attempt to use  Benveniste&#8217;s conclusions for the malign purposes to which they might be put.  There are some obvious dangers. In homeopathic medicine, for example, which  works on the principle that very small concentrations of appropriate products  may have consequences that far outweigh those expected of them, there will be a  natural inclination to welcome Benveniste&#8217;s article as aid and comfort, but that  would be premature, probably mistaken.</p>
<p><em>Nature</em> also appended the following to the end of Benveniste&#8217;s article:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Editorial Reservation:</p>
<p>Readers of this article may share the incredulity of the many referees who have  commented on several versions of it during the past several months. The essence  of the result is that an aqueous solution of an antibody retains its ability to  evoke a biological response even when diluted to such an extent that there is a  negligible chance of there being a single molecule in any sample. There is no  physical basis for such an activity. With the kind collaboration of Professor  Benveniste, <em>Nature</em> has therefore arranged for independent investigators to  observe repetitions of the experiments. A report of this investigation will  appear shortly.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Apparently, the editors of Nature were sufficiently uncomfortable with  Benveniste&#8217;s article that, after several revisions, they agreed to publish the  article only if the researchers would permit their laboratory to be visited and  their results investigated, by a team selected by <em>Nature.</em></p>
<p>This team consisted of John Maddox, a journalist with a background in  theoretical physics; Walter W. Stewart, a specialist in studies of errors and  inconsistencies in the scientific literature and in the subject of misconduct in  science, and James &#8220;The Amazing&#8221; Randi, whose name should be familiar to readers    as a magician and skilled debunker of the paranormal and who  was included on the team &#8220;in case the remarkable results reported had been  produced by trickery&#8221;. After their investigation, the team published their  findings in the July 28 issue of <em>Nature,</em> Vol. 334. They found in essence that  the results were wholly erroneous.</p>
<p><strong>Erroneous results found</strong></p>
<p>Before their findings can be properly understood, it is necessary to understand  the design of the original experiment. In the bloodstream is a variety of types  of white blood cell, which perform various functions. This experiment focused on  a particular type known as a basophil, so named because it contains granules  which are selectively stained by basic (alkaline) dyes. Basophils carry on their  surface a type of antibody called IgE (Immunoglobulin type E). If this antibody  binds to a foreign substance for which it is specific, it causes the basophil to  release its granules, which contain histamine and a variety of other substances  responsible for the clinical signs of allergic reactions. The same result can be  elicited by exposing the basophils to an antibody which binds to IgE, referred  to as antiIgE.</p>
<p>In their experiment, Benveniste&#8217;s team began with a standard solution of anti  IgE and repeatedly diluted it by 1:10. Each dilution was then added to a  suspension of white cells, and the number of intact basophils was counted. (Basophils  which have lost their granules do not pick up the specific stain and are  therefore not readily distinguishable from certain other types of white cells.)  This was done by placing a measured amount of the suspension in a counting  chamber, a glass slide with a grid precisely etched on its surface, and counting  the basophils under a microscope. The amount of degranulation was calculated by  noting the difference in the number of basophils between test and control samples, expressed as a percentage.</p>
<p>Under the eyes of the investigative team, Denveniste&#8217;s researchers repeated  their experiment seven times: three times using their normal procedure, once  &#8220;blind&#8221; (that is, reading the dilutions in random order without knowing which ones  they were), and three strict &#8220;double blind&#8221; experiments, in which no one present  knew which samples corresponded to which dilutions until after they had been  read. The &#8220;normal&#8221; runs produced the results that had been reported in the  original paper. The fourth run produced very high peaks even at high dilutions,  an effect comparable to the undiluted original sample. The three double blind  runs produced the result that conventional science would have expected: a high  initial peak, which drops off to a minimum when diluted.</p>
<p><strong>Experiments don&#8217;t always &#8220;work&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>The investigation team found the following flaws in the experiment:</p>
<p>1) The experiments do not always &#8220;work&#8221;. There are periods during which high  dilutions produce the negative results that current science would expect, and  these periods last for up to several months. These negative results were not  reported.</p>
<p>2) The experimenters are far from unbiased. Two of the coauthors of the article  receive salaries under a contract with a supplier of homeopathic medicines. This  alone, of course, does not invalidate the experiment; most researchers expect to  get some particular result when they run an experiment. It does, however,  explain why the researchers, even now, refuse to admit that their results have  been refuted. The investigators stated in their report that &#8220;the climate of the  laboratory is inimical to an objective evaluation of the exceptional data&#8221;.</p>
<p>3) The peaks seen at high dilution, and described by Benveniste as &#8220;periodic&#8221;  occur in fact at rather irregular intervals. Furthermore, Benveniste&#8217;s notebooks  showed that the peaks do not occur at the same dilutions on successive runs.  This alone suggests that the results reported are a random phenomenon, and not  the positive result claimed.</p>
<p>4) There is a problem in experimental procedures of this type called &#8220;sampling  error&#8221;. In essence, when a sample of blood is placed in the counting chamber,  and the number of basophils is counted, the result will not be the same each  time, but will vary randomly to either side of the true proportion. The branch  of mathematics known as statistics provides formulas for calculating how much  variation of this type can be expected for a given experimental setup. In the  investigators&#8217; report. they state:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>At INSERM 200 [Benveniste's lab], there seems to have gown up a less formal way  of dealing with problems of this kind: When the reading of a diluted sample is  greater than the control counts, the experimenter often counts the control  sample again, on the grounds that the first reading &#8220;must have been wrong &#8230;.&#8221;</p>
<p>This procedure exaggerates to some extent the amount of basophil degranulation  measured with reagents at high dilution. The practice makes the control values  unreliable, and is a significant pointer to the laboratory&#8217;s disregard of statistical principles.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>To someone with no training in statistics, this procedure might seem reasonable,  or unimportant. In fact, it alone is sufficient to invalidate the results.  Recounting only those control values which are &#8220;too low&#8221; has the effect of  artificially inflating the control values, and thereby creating a purely  artifactual difference between the control and sample values.</p>
<p>The investigators summarized their findings by stating,  &#8220;We conclude that there  is no substantial basis for the claim that antiIgE at high dilution (by factors  as great as 10<sup>120</sup> retains its biological effectiveness, and that the hypothesis  that water can be imprinted with the memory of past solutes is as unnecessary as  it is fanciful.&#8221;</p>
<p><em>Dr. Scrimgeour is a veterinarian with Agriculture Canada&#8217;s Meat Hygiene Division  and was a member of the executive of Ontario Skeptics when this article was  written.</em></p>
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