Archangel M
Senior Master
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2007
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First off let me submit this:
http://www.nasw.org/awards/1999/99Taubesarticle1.htm
It is a well written article about the battle being waged over Salt, Medicine, Public Policy and even Science itself. As with many issues involving science/medicine and public policy, the issue of Salt intake and it's effect on health is not as clear cut as many have been led to believe.
At it's core, the debate over salt comes down to a split between the "Salt kills..stop now" camp and the "wait one minute there isn't any conclusive evidence that Salt in and of itself is bad for your health" camp.
Now you may be asking "why is this in the study"?
Well, as I read this article many things began to pop out at me as being analogical with various political issues and divisive "hot buttons" I have seen in other areas.
At stake are politicians drafting bills to outlaw salt and get their fingers into what we are allowed to eat. One scientist put it this way:
How much does THAT sound like "How can you try to kill the Health Care Bill with a Constitutional argument..all we are trying to do is save the children. IT"S FOR THE CHILDREN YOU HEARTLESS BASTARD!!" ?
Then there is this ever present issue:
Can anybody else see where this argument has been used in other politically charged issues? How about global warming and the accusations of energy sector or "environmentalist" influence in scientific research?
Science and public policy. Science and the ability to influence it through politics, partisanship and human emotion.
I see a pattern here.
I will end with the quote that starts this article:
"Science ... warns me to be careful how I adopt a view which jumps with my preconceptions, and to require stronger evidence for such belief than for one to which I was previously hostile. My business is to teach my aspirations to conform themselves to fact, not to try and make facts harmonize with my aspirations."
http://www.nasw.org/awards/1999/99Taubesarticle1.htm
It is a well written article about the battle being waged over Salt, Medicine, Public Policy and even Science itself. As with many issues involving science/medicine and public policy, the issue of Salt intake and it's effect on health is not as clear cut as many have been led to believe.
At it's core, the debate over salt comes down to a split between the "Salt kills..stop now" camp and the "wait one minute there isn't any conclusive evidence that Salt in and of itself is bad for your health" camp.
On the one side are those experts primarily physicians turned epidemiologists, and administrators such as Roccella and Claude Lenfant, head of NHLBI who insist that the evidence that salt raises blood pressure is effectively irrefutable. They have an obligation, they say, to push for universal salt reduction, because people are dying and will continue to die if they wait for further research to bring scientific certainty. On the other side are those researchers primarily physicians turned epidemiologists, including former presidents of the American Heart Association, the American Society of Hypertension, and the European and international societies of hypertension who argue that the data supporting universal salt reduction have never been compelling, nor has it ever been demonstrated that such a program would not have unforeseen negative side effects.
Now you may be asking "why is this in the study"?
Well, as I read this article many things began to pop out at me as being analogical with various political issues and divisive "hot buttons" I have seen in other areas.
At stake are politicians drafting bills to outlaw salt and get their fingers into what we are allowed to eat. One scientist put it this way:
This "modest reduction," says NHBPEP director Ed Roccella, "can shift some arterial pressures down and prevent some strokes." Roccellas message is clear: "All Im trying to do is save some lives."
How much does THAT sound like "How can you try to kill the Health Care Bill with a Constitutional argument..all we are trying to do is save the children. IT"S FOR THE CHILDREN YOU HEARTLESS BASTARD!!" ?
Then there is this ever present issue:
The dispute over salt, however, is an idiosyncratic one, remarkable in several fundamental aspects. Foremost, many who advocate salt reduction insist publicly that the controversy is a) either nonexistent, or b) due solely to the influence of the salt lobby and its paid consultant-scientists.
Can anybody else see where this argument has been used in other politically charged issues? How about global warming and the accusations of energy sector or "environmentalist" influence in scientific research?
Science and public policy. Science and the ability to influence it through politics, partisanship and human emotion.
I see a pattern here.
I will end with the quote that starts this article:
"Science ... warns me to be careful how I adopt a view which jumps with my preconceptions, and to require stronger evidence for such belief than for one to which I was previously hostile. My business is to teach my aspirations to conform themselves to fact, not to try and make facts harmonize with my aspirations."
Thomas Huxley, 1860