Posts from March 2009

Hearin' about heroin

I'm about half-way through Ben Goldacre's splendid book 'Bad Science', which talks about clinical trials, homeopathy, the subtleties of the placebo effect, the supposed benefits of antioxidants, and a range of other topics, and does so in a most enjoyable way. He exposes some of the real science, and some of the nonsense, behind what is reported in the media.

Ben is a doctor who works for the NHS, has a column in The Guardian, and a web site at badscience.net. To get a feel for his work, have a look at his analysis of some recent feel-good reports in the papers and, worryingly, in Parliament. He begins:

""Seven hundred British troops seized four Taliban narcotics factories containing £50m of drugs"" said the Guardian on Wednesday. ""Troops recovered more than 400kg of raw opium in one drug factory and nearly 800kg of heroin in another."" Lordy that is good. In the Telegraph, British forces had seized ""£50 million of heroin and killed at least 20 Taliban fighters in a daring raid that dealt a significant blow to the insurgents in Afghanistan."" Everyone carried the good news. ""John Hutton, defence secretary, said the seizure of £50m of narcotics would 'starve the Taliban of funding preventing the proliferation of drugs and terror in the UK'."" Well.
And then he looks at the real numbers. Read the post here.

C18th, meet C21st

Amazon have just released the Kindle software for the iPhone/iTouch. It's only available to US customers, but I have a US credit card so was able to download it. This means I can now get any of 240,000 books on my iPod, within a few seconds.

And the reading experience is pretty good: there's not much text visible at once in the standard font size, but a slight swipe of thumb or finger is all that's needed to turn the page. Mmm. This could prove expensive.

No prizes for guessing which book I downloaded first, though! (Kindle version)