PLoS Medicine

Prozac and Placebos: Review of a Media Maelstrom

Submitted by Andrew Hyde on Thu, 2008-03-06 13:08.

Last week we had the interesting experience of watching how a PLoS Medicine meta-analysis of anti-depressant drug trials generated a furore in the media. It featured on the front page of four UK national newspapers (the Guardian, the Telegraph, the Independent and the Times), was the leading item on the BBC News and prompted stories in Time, the Wall Street Journal and the Economist.

The paper not only posed questions about the benefits of antidepressants, it revealed how many clinical trial results do not see the light of day. But whilst the issues relating to it continue to be debated – a discussion leads the Guardian Science Weekly Podcast this week– some of the headlines in the media maelstrom misrepresented the study.

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No Such Thing as a Free Lunch (or Gift or Sample)

Submitted by Andrew Hyde on Mon, 2008-02-11 10:45.

Are the staggering amounts spent by drug companies on marketing justified by their innovation in drug development? Not according to a Policy Forum in PLoS Medicine which stimulated a great deal of debate across blogs and news sites over the past couple of weeks.

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Fearsome foursome factors of longevity

Submitted by Andrew Hyde on Fri, 2008-01-11 11:51.

Following the recent blog that related a PLoS paper to end of year excess, this week a PLoS Medicine study evaluating the combined impact of four healthy forms of behaviour was devoured by journalists keen to remind us to stick to New Year resolutions. This was certainly the approach of the New Scientist who let their readers know that no matter how “fat or unhealthy you already are” the conclusions of the study by Kay-Tee Khaw and colleagues are important. Conducted amongst 20,000 participants in the UK, the study found that those who are non-smokers, take exercise, have a moderate alcohol intake and eat five servings of fruit and vegetables a day live on average an additional fourteen years of life compared with people who adopt none of these behaviours.


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The Unlikely Tale of Hospital-Acquired Infections, Clothing and Faith: Guest Blog by Prof. Aziz Sheikh

Submitted by Gavin Yamey on Wed, 2007-12-26 10:10.

England's Secretary of State for Health has announced that from January 2008, hospital staff must wear "bare below the elbows" attire. Professor Aziz Sheikh, recently appointed to PLoS Medicine's Editorial Board, discusses the implications of the announcement.

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