Showing posts with label hoax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoax. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2008

The Top Ten Unfounded Health Scares of 2007

I'm sure like most of you, I get scores of spam and hoax emails, which I try to ignore. When, however, they are related to health issues, I try to research the information for validity (and usually fail to find 'evidence'). This article then, piqued my interest...

Unfounded health scares have been with us for a long time, from a panic over chemicals on cranberries in the 50s to the hysteria over Alar on apples in the late 1980s. Here's a list of the ones we considered most ridiculous in 2007:

Scare #1: There's deadly lead in lipstick. Not true -- the tiny amounts are harmless.

Scare #2: Fluoridated water jeopardizes your health. Nope -- it promotes dental health.

Scare #3: Red meat and processed meat increase cancer risk. Hogwash -- the studies involved people eating huge amounts and leading very sedentary lives. Meat is fine in a balanced diet.

Scare #4: The chemicals used to make Teflon cause low-birth-weight babies. No way -- the variations in weight in the studies are too small to draw such conclusions.

Scare #5: Nitrites in cured meat cause lung disease. Baloney -- super-high exposure of rats to a related chemical may cause cancer, but that's not relevant to us.

Scare #6: Roses contain toxic pesticides. Here's a better idea -- stop and smell the roses.

Scare #7: Rubber duckies are toxic to kids because of chemicals called phthalates. Another attempt to get attention by frightening parents.

Scare #8: Vaccines cause autism. Nope -- many studies have shown small traces of vaccine preservative aren't harmful to kids.

Scare #9: Office printers are as hazardous as secondhand smoke. No, no, no -- they're only comparable in that you can arbitrarily lump smoke and printer particles together as "pollution."

Scare #10: Water bottles cause cancer. Drink up -- virtually no trace of the relevant chemicals leaches into your water.

For details on these and other nonsensical scares, visit our site: www.acsh.org and until then, the American Council on Science and Health advises you to remain calm and skeptical.

Posted 02/29/2008 by The Medscape Journal of Medicine.
Presenter: Elizabeth M. Whelan, ScD, MS, MPH of the American Council on Science and Health.