13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Barret is Great! Ignore The Critics, Buy The Book, April 15, 2007
This review is from: The Vitamin Pushers: How the "Health Food" Industry Is Selling America a Bill of Goods (Consumer Health Library) (Hardcover)
Barrett's book is a worthwhile read for anyone with an interest in the subject matter. As a critic of several modes and practitioners of alternative medicine, Barrett has been a natural lightening rod for criticism by those whose scams he has exposed. The negative Amazon reviews here should be taken with a huge grain of salt. Many of these reviews reflect ideologically opposition to criticism of alternative medicine; they don't even discuss the content of Barrett's book...the critics probably never even read it. Barrett's most outspoken critics have been involved in court cases against him and most of what they say is just slanderous mudslinging. Sources that matter, like the Journal of the American Medical Association and Canadian Medical Association, give Barrett the thumbs up. We need more people like him guarding consumers against healthcare fraud. Buy this book and learn how to protect yourself against con artists.
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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Educated Technical Professional without a Dog in the Fight, April 2, 2009
This review is from: The Vitamin Pushers: How the "Health Food" Industry Is Selling America a Bill of Goods (Consumer Health Library) (Hardcover)
I am not, nor have I ever been, involved in a health-related profession. I am in technology by training and career. So, I don't have a dog in this fight, as it were.
What I do know, though, is that there is a "standard of truth" -- the double-blind study.
If the modality is valid, if the benefits real, then they should be able to be demonstrated. Line up 1000 folks in one group and offer the remedy. Line up 1000 folks in a second (control) group, and offer them the fake (placebo is the operative word). Then, let the experiment run....
In three years, five years, ten years, the group receiving the remedy should be able to show quantifiable, statistically significant, differentiation. ("X" percentage less of occurrences of cancer, "Y" percentage less incidence of diabetes, or whatever outcome.) Elsewise, there is no basis whatsoever to claim a "cause" leading to an "effect".
Without this, we are at liberty to disregard the claims. This is COMPLETELY lacking in the "Health Food" industry. As I have read their, yes, I will say "so-called" research; it is anecdotal at best, relying on a small group of people relating how they "feel," possibly a result they "want", with no documentable, measurable outcome. It is academically dishonest at best. For some people making a ton of money on these products, one would expect someone, somewhere would be forwarding the cash to actually conduct the definitive study, subject their findins to critical, juried review, as I've laid out in the paragraphs above. Then, we can plant the flag and claim "truth". But, still, we hear nothing but crickets chirping.
As I have read Dr. Barrett in this treatise, he simply points this out. Nothing more. His lengthy references and annotations are legitimate as I've looked those up and corroborated.
Quality of the food supply? Depleted soil? Nah. It is the DNA and RNA combination which determines the outcome of the growth of a carrot. Postulating a dearth of the chemical building blocks (atoms and molecules) available, then, these processes are aborted, and the carrot simply does not materialize. The fact it even exists means that the vegetable has all the same molecular make-up, ergo, the same nutritive quality, per cubic inch of product, as any "parent" carrot from time immemorial.
Read this book. It is a great read, and you will be innoculated against hype and advertising. Let the Buyer Beware. Or, as P.T. Barnum once should have said, "A fool and his money should have never gotten together in the first place."
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