←back to thread

352 points keithly | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
kart23 ◴[] No.41842758[source]
Isn't flossing not supported by science also, but all the news articles said you should keep flossing?
replies(11): >>41842896 #>>41842925 #>>41843072 #>>41843073 #>>41843193 #>>41843771 #>>41843835 #>>41844751 #>>41846373 #>>41848691 #>>41850301 #
lesuorac ◴[] No.41843072[source]
Perhaps you'll find it useful that a double-blind study found no improvement in outcome from use of a parachute when jumping out of a helicopter.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC300808/

replies(3): >>41843112 #>>41843948 #>>41844155 #
hervature ◴[] No.41843112[source]
That's not at all what that "study" says. It is a critique (in poor taste if you ask me) that everything does not require a double-blind study.
replies(2): >>41844172 #>>41848505 #
1. marcosdumay ◴[] No.41848505{3}[source]
IMO, it's a critique on the "no study shows it exists, therefore it doesn't exist" attitude.

If you manage to do double-blind studies for every single piece of knowledge out there, kudos for you. There's nothing bad in this.

Anyway, it's on topic for several sidelines people are raising. But not on topic for the main article.