Pediatricians debunk pearls of medical wisdom

Don't Cross Your Eyes-They'll Get Stuck that Way!, a new book by myth-fighting Indiana University School of Medicine pediatricians Aaron Carroll, M.D., M.S., and Rachel Vreeman, M.D., M.S., debunks the pearls of medical wisdom that many people and even their physicians believe are true. Be prepared to revise your thinking; no, an apple a day won't keep the doctor away and no, warm milk won't help you sleep.

Dr. Carroll, associate professor of pediatrics, and Dr. Vreeman, assistant professor of pediatrics, are physicians and health services researchers on a mission to bring evidence-based medicine to the general public and slay the growing number of health myths that are so prevalent.

"You shouldn't just accept that the toilet seat is the dirtiest place in the bathroom, or that the air on planes can make you sick, or that cell phones cause brain cancer. It's OK to question your physician. Asking why is just as important as asking what," said Dr. Vreeman.

Why do so many myths exist?

"People want to make sense of the world around them; if they read it in the paper or on the internet, or hear it on TV or from their mom or others in authority, they think it must be true. The difference between association and causation is being lost. Just because two things occur at nearly the same time or initially appear related, like vaccines and autism, for example, doesn't mean that one caused the other," said Dr. Carroll.

The pair found that scientific scrutiny shows, for example, that vitamin C does not cure colds or even mitigate cold symptoms; hydrogen peroxide is not good for wounds and may actually be bad; and air dryers do not keep your hands cleaner than paper towels.

The authors admit that even they believed some myths prior to investigating the science, or lack of science, behind them. Dr. Carroll was convinced that avoiding eggs, known to be high in cholesterol, was good for the heart, but research shows that eggs do not lead to heart disease in otherwise healthy people. Dr. Vreeman was certain that stretching before running would help her be a better runner. It won't, according to studies. They both thought that uncovering a wound at night would help it heal, but studies show that is not true either.

One myth you don't have to surrender? While it hasn't been studied in rigorous clinical trials of healthy and sick individuals, chicken soup does have properties that make you feel better when you have a cold.

Don't Cross Your Eyes-They'll Get Stuck that Way! is published by St. Martin's Press and is available online and at book stores across the country.

Dr. Carroll and Dr. Vreeman, who are Regenstrief Institute affiliated scientists and Riley Hospital for Children at Indiana University Health physicians, are also the authors of Don't Swallow Your Gum!: Myths, Half-Truths, and Outright Lies About Your Body and Health, published in 2009. In this book they debunked such myths as eating turkey makes you sleepy and a dog's mouth is cleaner than a human's.

Comments

  1. Maggy Maggy United States says:

    Despite the relentless drumbeat of propaganda from the CDC, public health authorities and pediatricians, there’s a funny thing going on. The evidence of a connection between mercury exposure from vaccines and autism keeps growing.

    Last year, two scientists at the University of Northern Iowa, Catherine DeSoto and Robert Hitlan, published a fascinating review paper. They asked a simple question: what does the published evidence linking autism and mercury in vaccines really say? To answer that question, they did a simple Pubmed search using "autism and mercury". There are now over 160 published papers (4 to 1 in support) on this subject. There are more than 1,400 on the toxicity of thimerosal (the mercury vaccine preservative). Try "vaccines and autism" and you will find 526. Who's ignoring the science?  

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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