Forex Trading Stock Courses
  • Home
  • Courses
  • Contact Us
Login / Register
Sign inCreate an Account

Lost your password?

Search
Wishlist
24 items $1,212.99
Menu
Forex Trading Stock Courses
24 items $1,212.99
-58%
Roy Benaroch - Skeptic's Guide to Health
Click to enlarge
Keys To The VIP – Seasons 1, 2 and 3
Keys To The VIP – Seasons 1, 2 and 3 $100.00 Original price was: $100.00.$37.00Current price is: $37.00.
Back to products
How To Build And Maintain Generalisations For Influence And Change of https://crabaca.store/
How To Build And Maintain Generalisations For Influence And Change $47.00

Roy Benaroch – Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media

$52.15 Original price was: $52.15.$22.00Current price is: $22.00.

Roy Benaroch – Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media is digital courses, ebook, digital audio and DVD… not physical product. We will sent a download link lifetime to your email order. Or you can update your courses at “My Downloads“

Compare
Add to wishlist
Share:
Close
  • Description
  • Reviews (0)
  • Shipping & Delivery
Description

Courses Infomation

Roy Benaroch – Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media

Roy Benaroch - Skeptic's Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media

Roy Benaroch – Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media

**More information:

Description

If you’ve ever sneezed while driving your car, did you immediately think, “Cars Cause the Common Cold!”? No, of course not. A headline like that wouldn’t make any sense. And yet, some of the sources we rely on for health and medical news are not much better. Many media outlets are perfectly happy to grab us with a wacky headline or an article that reflects none of the nuance of the study on which it’s based—as long as we buy the magazine or click through to the article. And we do. We take the bait. With 50,000 scientific studies published each week in English, many media outlets don’t put in the time and effort to adequately decipher and report on even a tiny fraction of those studies. But they publish news about them, anyway.
Hide Full Description

As consumers of medical news, how can we know whether the article we just read is based on solid science or trash?

We know we can’t believe every article we read. If we did, we’d conclude that everything causes cancer; any non-organic food will cause our death; we should never eat fats or carbohydrates; and high-dose supplements of every vitamin will save our lives or, depending on the specific article, kill us.

Professor Roy Benaroch of Emory University School of Medicine provides just the direction we need to answer important questions, look beyond media hype, and more in The Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media. In 24 fascinating lectures that address the most important health issues of our day, Dr. Benaroch shows us how to recognize the good reporting that provides balanced, accurate, and well-sourced information and the bad reporting that is incomplete at best and purposely misleading at worst. You’ll learn how to ask the questions that take you past the headlines and beyond the way health news is typically reported.

Would You Believe?

Dr. Benaroch provides numerous examples of headlines you wouldn’t fall for—or would you? While some headlines are published on obscure internet sites, others are published in some of the largest, most-trusted papers in the country. Every day, people take the bait to read about:

“Breatharian Couple Survives on the Universe’s Energy Instead of Food.” Just a little bit of digging reveals that the couple actually does eat food. Of course, they do.
“Traces of Controversial Herbicide Are Found in Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream.” The article itself states that a typical child would need to consume 145,000 eight-ounce servings a day to reach the federal safety limit of the chemical in question. But the headline made for great “clickbait” since it used the successful technique of pairing a random fact with a recognizable brand name.
“The Soothing Benefit of Acupuncture for Babies.” The article states the goal of the study was to use acupuncture to soothe babies and shorten their crying spells—and then makes it clear that the acupuncture didn’t actually work. Yet, you would never know this from the headline.

Addressing the Top Medical Controversies of the Day

In providing samples of both good and bad medical journalism, The Skeptic’s Guide addresses both significant medical topics and smaller, everyday questions like, “Should I floss?” Some of the major issues and subjects you will look at include:

Cardiovascular health and the new blood pressure guidelines,
Cancer screenings and treatment,
The opioid crisis,
The obesity epidemic,
The price of prescription medication,
The stigma of mental health, and more.

To better understand these issues in all their complexity, you’ll go behind the headlines to learn more about the subjects themselves, as well as the media’s role in addressing them.

Building Your Skeptic’s Toolkit

With so many false or misleading sources out there, it can be natural for readers to become cynical about medical reporting and headline news. However, as Dr. Benaroch points out, there’s a difference between being a cynic and being a skeptic. Becoming a cynic and believing nothing of what you read would be just as ineffective as being gullible and believing everything. There is good health-related information out there, and The Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and Media will teach you how to access it. You’ll learn six specific questions to ask yourself as you read, all of which begin with the letter “s” for ease of remembering. These questions form the basis of your “Skeptic’s Toolkit,” the lens through which you can determine the value of any article. They are:

Source. What’s the source of the article and is it credible for medical information? Is the article based on a study from a reputable university or research institute? Or is it based on anecdotal information from a non-scientist? You might be interested in reading a first-person account about someone whose blood pressure improved when she started drinking tea—but you wouldn’t want to base your own medical decisions on it.

Strength. Is the evidence presented strong enough to be valuable? Stories that review large clinical trials are much stronger than stories about small pilot studies. Dr. Benaroch explains why the strongest studies are the gold standard double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled experiments with a large number of participants.
Salesmanship. Is the article trying to sell me something or promote a particular brand? Many media accounts are repackaged press releases whose purpose is to sell a product. That doesn’t mean the story is false, but it does mean you’re probably not getting a balanced viewpoint. And salesmanship works—as evidenced by, among other examples, the $1.2-billion fish oil supplement industry in the United States that is going strong despite 15 years of research that reveals no actual health benefits.
Salience. Is this study about people like me, and are the factors they’re measuring in the study important to me? If the article refers to a study about children, you can’t assume the results hold true for adults. As one example, Dr. Benaroch highlights an article claiming to show that cell phone exposure increases the risk of cancer. But actually, the experiment was conducted on rats.
Sides of the Scale. Does the news report try to present a viewpoint from scientists not directly involved in the study, or from people with appropriate expertise who can offer a balanced viewpoint? The article should quote additional experts in the field, not just the study authors. And, if there are legitimate disagreements about the study, those should be mentioned, too. But don’t fall for a false equivalence in which invalid or untrue assertions are given equal weight to established scientific consensus.
Sensible. Is the story itself sensible, making sense and fitting in with what we already know? It doesn’t matter how many times you sneeze while driving, we know that cars do not cause the common cold—no matter how nice the alliteration sounds. Exaggerations in headlines should also send up a red flag. “Miracle cures” and “magic bullet” might get our attention, but those descriptions almost always point to inflated or false claims.

With Dr. Benaroch’s guidance, you’ll know how to find information you can truly rely on. And you’ll know which articles to put straight in the trash.

Health and Medical course

More information about Medical:

Medicine is the science and practice of establishing the diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and prevention of disease.
Medicine encompasses a variety of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness.
Contemporary medicine applies biomedical sciences, biomedical research, genetics, and medical technology to diagnose, treat, and prevent injury and disease,
typically through pharmaceuticals or surgery, but also through therapies as diverse as psychotherapy, external splints and traction, medical devices, biologics, and ionizing radiation, amongst others.

Medicine has been around for thousands of years, during most of which it was an art (an area of skill and knowledge) frequently having connections to the religious and
philosophical beliefs of local culture. For example, a medicine man would apply herbs and say prayers for healing, or an ancient philosopher and physician would apply bloodletting according to the theories of humorism.
In recent centuries, since the advent of modern science, most medicine has become a combination of art and science (both basic and applied, under the umbrella of medical science).
While stitching technique for sutures is an art learned through practice, the knowledge of what happens at the cellular and molecular level in the tissues being stitched arises through science.

Salepage : Roy Benaroch – Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media

About Author

Roy Benaroch

Dr. Roy was born and raised in Miami, Florida. There, he was an avid SCUBA diver and State Champion Pente player. During his years at Tulane University pursuing a degree in Biomedical Engineering, Dr. Roy performed in several musicals and rock and roll bands, playing keyboards, saxophone, bass guitar, and singing. He has lived in the Atlanta area since beginning medical school at Emory University in 1990. Dr. Roy completed residency through the Emory University Affiliated Hospitals in 1997, and then served as Chief Resident and Instructor in the Department of Pediatrics. He has continued his involvement on the Emory faculty as an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pediatrics. He was Board Certified in Pediatrics in 1997 and joined Pediatric Physicians, PC in 1998. Dr. Roy lives in Dunwoody with his wife and three children. In addition to his work as a pediatrician, Dr. Roy enjoys swimming, vegetable gardening, and writing. Dr. Roy has written two books for parents, Solving Health and Behavioral Problems from Birth to Preschool: A Parent’s Guide and A Guide to Getting the Best Healthcare for Your Child. He also writes and serves as a pediatric expert on WebMD and many other web sites, and has done several courses in his “Medical School for Everyone” series with The Great Courses. A complete list of his courses and publications can be found here. His blog, The Pediatric Insider, features more of Dr. Roy’s essays on many parenting and health topics. You can visit his blog to post your own topic suggestions and questions, and follow Dr. Roy on Twitter. Dr. Roy also serves as the Chair of The Children’s Care Network, an innovative partnership of over 1,000 pediatric providers in the Atlanta area dedicated to providing high-quality, state-of-the-art pediatric care.

More From Categories : Health – Fitness – Medical
Reviews (0)

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Roy Benaroch – Skeptic’s Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media” Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Shipping & Delivery

Related products

-79%
Copywriting for a Cause: How to Profit as a Writer and Make a Difference in the World By AWAI of https://crabaca.store/
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

Copywriting for a Cause: How to Profit as a Writer and Make a Difference in the World By AWAI

Everything Else
$197.00 Original price was: $197.00.$42.00Current price is: $42.00.
Peter Titus - Create Your Own Automated Stock Trading Robot In EXCEL! [39 Video (MP4) + 2 Document (HTML)]
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

Peter Titus – Create Your Own Automated Stock Trading Robot In EXCEL! [39 Video (MP4) + 2 Document (HTML)]

Everything Else, Stock - Bond trading
$42.00
-85%
AWAI - Copywriting Genius: The Master Collection of https://crabaca.store/
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

AWAI – Copywriting Genius: The Master Collection

Business & Sales, Everything Else, Internet Marketing
$497.00 Original price was: $497.00.$77.00Current price is: $77.00.
-64%
Rudy Hunter - Birth Trauma UnWinding Process of https://crabaca.store/
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

Rudy Hunter – Birth Trauma UnWinding Process

Everything Else
$88.00 Original price was: $88.00.$32.00Current price is: $32.00.
-79%
Scott Bolan - Mental Warfare Secrets of https://crabaca.store/
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

Scott Bolan – Mental Warfare Secrets

Everything Else, Metaphysical & Self Help
$197.00 Original price was: $197.00.$42.00Current price is: $42.00.
-83%
André Chaperon - Sphere of Influence of https://crabaca.store/
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

André Chaperon – Sphere of Influence

Everything Else
$394.00 Original price was: $394.00.$67.00Current price is: $67.00.
-80%
Austin Brawner – Conversionxl Lifecycle Email Marketing For Ecommerce
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

Austin Brawner – Conversionxl Lifecycle Email Marketing For Ecommerce

Everything Else, Internet Marketing
$299.00 Original price was: $299.00.$60.00Current price is: $60.00.
-82%
Funnel Gorgeous - Build Gorgeous Funnels
Compare
Quick view
Add to wishlist
Enroll Course

Funnel Gorgeous – Build Gorgeous Funnels, Easy, On Brand,Profitable

Everything Else
$297.00 Original price was: $297.00.$52.00Current price is: $52.00.
zonex
Trader Finance
stock market
side hustle
Real Inves
Ninja Trader
forexzone
forex society
bbmarket
  • Menu
  • Categories
Set your categories menu in Header builder -> Mobile -> Mobile menu element -> Show/Hide -> Choose menu
  • Home
  • Courses
  • Courses
  • Courses
  • My Account
  • Blog
  • Blog
  • Blog
  • Checkout
  • Cart
  • Wishlist
  • Compare
  • Login / Register
Shopping cart
Close

Happy BlackFriday festival !!! 40% off for all coures. Discount code [ BLACK6 ]

Cleantalk Pixel
Start typing to see posts you are looking for.
Shop
Sidebar
Wishlist
24 items Cart
My account