http://a1.twimg.com/profile_images/355408732/Rashid_Smiling_Beach_2_bigger.jpg
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:52 (sixteen years ago)
Oh wait - it was a joke! Funny, funny guy.http://twitter.com/kimmyatdrbuttar
― PC Thug (Ned Trifle II), Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:52 (sixteen years ago)
Shouldn't they be dealing with patients or something?
― PC Thug (Ned Trifle II), Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:53 (sixteen years ago)
they are Ned--the tweets help "heal" people
― jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:53 (sixteen years ago)
@bikerkristy Hey Mom
in all honesty I stopped reading here
― a Barbie-like nub where he provates should be (HI DERE), Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:55 (sixteen years ago)
Watching Dr. Buttar and Abie practice their martial arts in our gym. Abie has a big tournament this weekend. 5:41 PM Nov 10th from TwitterBerry
― jazzgasms (Mr. Que), Thursday, 12 November 2009 15:55 (sixteen years ago)
http://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=9477472
nothing new or mindblowing, just jenny bein' jenny
― the bait vs. radrake david (k3vin k.), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 05:20 (sixteen years ago)
Blerg. An old friend of mine posted that on Facebook, commenting that it was a "great example of a 'panel of experts' refuting a fact, seen in practice every day, because it adds fire to idea that vaccination can contribute to the onset of autism." Which is kind of confusing but I think he's saying that the "panel of experts" are refuting the "fact" that changes in diet impact autism because to find that changes in diet impact autism is to lend support to the idea that vaccines cause autism. Whatever. It's all so annoying.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:22 (sixteen years ago)
I couldn't make it through much of the piece, but it seems she's essentially saying "I disagree, because my child reacted differently to the diet"?
― you gone float up with it (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:26 (sixteen years ago)
Yes. And because her child is autistic, while this "panel of experts" merely has PhDs and research experience and peer reviewed studies, she is in a better position to tell everyone what really works as a "cure" for autism.
(I'm scare quoting "cure" because many autistic adults or adults on the autism spectrum don't feel they need to be "cured," thankyouverymuch - http://www.autisticadvocacy.org/)
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:30 (sixteen years ago)
i can't really make heads or tails of what your friend meant either. i guess after a few readings it looks to me like "this panel of experts shows that it's not diet so it must be vaccination that causes autism" but i'm not sure it really makes sense.
also, good luck getting an autistic kid to eat a totally different diet. autistic kids tend to be a lot more easily overwhelmed by sensory data and often only tolerate a pretty specific range of foods, fabrics, etc., and based on my anecdotal experience (yes now i am an authority too!) you probably should not handle that the same way you make a picky kid sit at the table until he tries the vegetables.
― Maria, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:33 (sixteen years ago)
(apparently the "wrong" usage of "refute" is pretty much as old as the "right" one, but still always have to bite tongue against cheap pedantic shots of "well, if they've refuted it then they're clearly right and there's no need to make a fuss, QED")
― ⍨ (a passing spacecadet), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:37 (sixteen years ago)
ps jenny you are totally right about "curing" autism being a questionable goal but i think that if you make choices during childhood that help with social integration (like mainstreaming in the classroom vs. full time separation into special ed) it can make a kid's life easier in the long run. i think of working on "managing" and "adapting" to autism as still worthwhile, hope it is not paternalistic (more than any other parenting choices anyhow) but i do think it is pragmatic.
― Maria, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:46 (sixteen years ago)
Maria, I'm far from an expert (neither a doctor nor a scientist nor a social worker nor on the autism spectrum, just involved in the disability rights community as an ally) but what you say makes sense. And I think you can avoid the paternalism if you involve the autistic community or groups like ASAN in the process somehow.
Here's a good blog post about eating and autism: http://thiswayoflife.org/blog/?p=213
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 14:54 (sixteen years ago)
Should have added: the comments are where it's at for that blog post.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 15:18 (sixteen years ago)
I feel so bad for her poor kid.
― girl moves (Abbott), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:52 (sixteen years ago)
her = J. McC.'s
All having to be told he can't do X and Y because he is a magical crystal indigo child that mommy cured.
― girl moves (Abbott), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 16:53 (sixteen years ago)
Article becomes a bit arsey but I don't really blame him: another anti-vaxxer's attempt to sue to silence:http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/index.html#4fisher
― Not the real Village People, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:15 (sixteen years ago)
on a related note:-- Politicians and celebrities shamed for science gaffes
* 12:00 05 January 2010 by Andy Coghlan--
Did you know that when you eat meat, it stays in your gut for 40 years, putrefies and leads to a disease that kills you? "That is a fact," according to the model and charity campaigner Heather Mills, one of several celebrities whose statements in the media last year have been scrutinised and where necessary challenged by the British-based charity Sense About Science in its latest "celebrity watch" review.
Since 2007, the charity has published the annual review after receiving alerts of scientifically questionable or incorrect statements by public figures. "We try hard to explain why it was wrong, and why what might appear to be true isn't," says Ellen Raphael, the charity's director.
Other celebs have been pulled up this year for apparently not realising that natural substances such as hormones are chemicals, and that ovulation is suppressed naturally by pregnancy and prolonged breastfeeding. Actress Suzanne Somers, for example, was quoted as saying that the contraceptive pill must be unsafe "because is it safe to take a chemical every day, and how would it be safe to take something that prevents ovulation?"
Actor Roger Moore, meanwhile, was taken to task for claiming that foie gras causes Alzheimer's disease, and Sarah Palin for dismissing evolution.
Soccer star Robin van Persie, who plays for London club Arsenal and the Netherlands national team, ended up in the review for publicising a treatment in which horse placental fluid was dripped onto his injury. "We'll be on the lookout for more sporting examples this year in the run-up to the World Cup finals in South Africa this summer and the 2012 Olympics," says Raphael.
Any readers disturbed by Mills's meaty assertions can take comfort from Melita Gordon, a gastroenterologist at the University of Liverpool, UK, quoted by Sense about Science: "Meat proteins, like all other proteins, are digested by enzymes and absorbed in the small bowel before they ever reach the colon. Any remaining indigestible matter is mechanically transited through the whole bowel in a matter of days and expelled in your faeces."
― kingfish, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:25 (sixteen years ago)
NAME AND SHAME IMO
― dome plow (gbx), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:27 (sixteen years ago)
I want to be famous so I can make up random shit and have everybody believe me over doctors and scientists and people with professional experience in a given field.
Clouds cause schizophrenia!Mothers wearing high heeled shoes lead to childhood obesity!Lima beans are poison!
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:34 (sixteen years ago)
You're right about the last one.
― WHY DON'T YOU JUST LICK THE BUS DIRECTLY (Laurel), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:34 (sixteen years ago)
Hey, it might just get you on Oprah
― kingfish, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:34 (sixteen years ago)
^^^last one is true xps
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:35 (sixteen years ago)
No way. I love lima beans.
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:36 (sixteen years ago)
OR MAYBE I AM JUST DEMENTED FROM LIMA BEAN POISONING!!!!
tell me of the clouds of yr youth
― dome plow (gbx), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:37 (sixteen years ago)
I swear on new years eve in the afternoonI saw a cloud that looked exactly like a dolphinthe cloud was just hanging over the oceanI said "that cloud looks just like a dolphin"and then I said "now it looks like an airplane"but it was always a dolphin
― super sexy psycho fantasy world (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:49 (sixteen years ago)
MTV game show or reality show appearances cause autism! Now that I would buy.
― ô_o (Nicole), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:50 (sixteen years ago)
aw, i like that
xp
― dome plow (gbx), Tuesday, 5 January 2010 21:51 (sixteen years ago)
Hi, I'm Troy McClure. You may know me from such educational videos as "Science: The Root of All Evil" and "The Half-Assed Approach to Mental Health Care."
― kenan, Tuesday, 5 January 2010 23:10 (sixteen years ago)
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article7006525.ece
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Friday, 29 January 2010 17:14 (sixteen years ago)
good. fuck that guy.
― that sex version of "blue thunder." (Mr. Que), Friday, 29 January 2010 17:16 (sixteen years ago)
No mention of the paper's own enthusiastic and long-lived contribution to the scare, of course.
― take me to your lemur (ledge), Friday, 29 January 2010 17:19 (sixteen years ago)
Good commentary on Wakefield and the anti-vax people, too: http://hoydenabouttown.com/20100129.7207/and-still-they-defend-him/
― she is writing about love (Jenny), Friday, 29 January 2010 17:19 (sixteen years ago)
Vaccine-Autism Study Is Retracted
A major British medical journal on Tuesday retracted a flawed study linking the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine to autism and bowel disease.
― mookieproof, Wednesday, 3 February 2010 16:54 (sixteen years ago)
20 years from now when the international plot to make everyone in the Western world autistic is uncovered, we're all going to feel a little foolish.
― PIES! PIES! PIES! PIES! PIES! (HI DERE), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 16:56 (sixteen years ago)
WSJ article on studies that looked at higher rates of autism diagnosis in certain LA neighborhoods:
L.A. Confidential: Seeking Reasons for Autism's Risehttp://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703422904575039351632663996.html?mod=WSJ_latestheadlines
― o. nate, Wednesday, 3 February 2010 16:57 (sixteen years ago)
the nuts are out in force over the Lancet's retraction - big editorial on the fucking HuffPo about why the retraction of the study doesn't mean anything
hate these ppl so fucking much I can't see straight
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:15 (sixteen years ago)
think i hate opportunistic, enabler physicians even more tbh
― and Watt (gbx), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:19 (sixteen years ago)
tho tbf, if a parent just flatly denies vaccination, i'd have a hard time as a pediatrician 'firing' their child as a pt, esp since they didnt have any say in the matter
― and Watt (gbx), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:20 (sixteen years ago)
xpost w/your first post: well no doubt - I mean you have to feel bad for the parents of children about whom there are no good answers - cf. that one episode of law & order with facilitated communicator debunking. but man something about the moon-landing qualities of this only in the sphere of actual medical science, really chafes at me
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:21 (sixteen years ago)
well, yeah, me too! cf -- peers of mine that either a) deny evolution or b) are hardline pro-lifers, but w/e
― and Watt (gbx), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:23 (sixteen years ago)
(also sometimes i think i'd better understand my world if i actually watched law and order. btw may i suggest "Ellen O." as the title for an ambitious song cycle about one young woman's transit of the american legal system, just sayin)
― and Watt (gbx), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:25 (sixteen years ago)
wait ppl in your program deny evolution?????
i think the article jenny linked has a really good explanation of why while im sympathetic to the parents of these kids there position is both dangerous and cruel
― Lamp, Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:25 (sixteen years ago)
yeah dude. don't think there are any young earthers, but there's definitely a few ID types and/or what i guess i'll call "evolutionary fatalists" who would say that even though anti-biotics and bacterial and viral life-cycles basically ~prove~ brainless evolution it's actually just part of the master plan etc.
have had at least one conversation where the person basically agreed with allllll the major themes w/e of evolution but still refused to go so far as to admit that we, you and i, used to monkeys. like evolution + human exceptionalism
he got a 39 on the MCAT btw
― and Watt (gbx), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:29 (sixteen years ago)
echoing the terrified sentiment re: fellow med students denying evolution O_O
john the huffpost people are anti-vaccine? or did i read you wrong? wtf is going on tbh
― rasta batman gigolo (k3vin k.), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:32 (sixteen years ago)
I understand the ppl who are like "God created evolution" but I don't understand ppl who say it didn't happen
― PIES! PIES! PIES! PIES! PIES! (HI DERE), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:33 (sixteen years ago)
here's what huffpo ran this a.m.
hxxp://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-kirby/the-emlancetem-retraction_b_446749.html
I delinked because we don't need autism/vaccine crazies comin in here, that is a lol-free zone imo
― Lee Dorrian Gray (J0hn D.), Wednesday, 3 February 2010 17:34 (sixteen years ago)