June 23, 2003
MANUFACTURING CERTAINTY (in Pseudo Science)
By David Crowe
"Tests indicate that you have a 90%
chance of being infected with a deadly virus. There is a
50% probability that it will cause disease within the next
10 years, and a possibility that it never will. If you take
the drugs that I offer, there is a significant risk that
you will experience a great decline in your quality of life,
and a possibility that the drugs will kill you."
Although
it might be the truth, you are unlikely to hear a doctor saying
this, because neither the doctor nor the patient can deal with
the uncertainty that it admits.
Technology
is the practical application of science, and one of the major
distinctions is its need for certainty. Studying
semiconductor physics can be a beautiful thing, but it remains
pure science until a discovery results in products that can
be reliably manufactured and used. Biological systems, especially
human beings, are far more complex and less predictable than
inorganic systems. Medicine, being the practical application
(technology) of human biologic science, requires a high degree
of certainty before new discoveries can be applied.
Unfortunately,
a feeling of certainty can be manufactured, and
there are many motivations to do so.
On October
12, 2001, a CDC scientist phoned then mayor of New York City,
Rudolph Giuliani, to tell him that, "with a high degree of
probability", a sample of skin from an NBC employee in Manhattan
was positive for cutaneous anthrax. The CDC scientist had this
confidence, because he had confidence in a test that a colleague
had previously developed. But this was not good enough for
Giuliani. "Don’t give me that stuff. Is it anthrax or not?" An
unqualified "Yes" from the CDC scientist kicked off the anthrax
crisis in New York City. [Altman, 2001]
A "No," under
the circumstances, would have been almost impossible. The consequences
for the CDC and Giuliani, if others had later confirmed anthrax,
would have been devastating to their careers. While reporters
might have questioned the accuracy of a "No," there was not
a whisper of dissent on the "Yes."
Medical
tests are a common way to manufacture certainty.
A test usually measures a ‘surrogate marker’ for a condition,
something that is otherwise invisible, or at least much more
difficult, expensive and time consuming to find directly. A
nicely packaged test can instill confidence and, in a sense,
create a disease when a positive test result is accepted without
any symptoms being present.
An HIV
test is perhaps the best example. A positive test is devastating
to most people, particularly those who are outside the traditional
risk groups and completely unprepared. Feelings of doom come,
not surprisingly, even to those who are perfectly healthy at
the time of the test [Gala, 1992].
Desperate
feelings lead to desperate actions, and, for HIV, the desperate
action is to take AIDS medications. Antiviral drugs have fatal
side effects, and even those who avoid that are likely to experience
a destruction of their quality of life, even if they were completely
healthy at the time of the test [Goodman, 2002].
Obviously,
the doctor and patient must feel certain that
tests are accurate. If the patient was told that there was
only a 90% certainty that the test was accurate they might
be much less likely to take medications carrying such risks.
The almost
universal impression among scientists, the media, governments
and the general public that HIV tests are accurate enough to
stake your life on is, strangely enough, so strong because
there is no absolute measure against which the tests can be
validated. Instead of accepting this as uncertainty
over whether the tests are meaningful, it is accepted as lack
of proof that they are not highly accurate.
All that
Robert Gallo’s and Luc Montagnier’s research teams found was
a high correlation between their antibody tests and AIDS. People
with AIDS had a high probability (88% in the case of Gallo
[Sarngadharan, 1984]) of testing positive, and people without
AIDS had a very low probability of testing positive. A huge
conceptual leap over a chasm of uncertainty was
to conclude from this evidence that a positive test in a healthy
person proved they had a condition that would inevitably kill
them.
The science
of HIV testing has progressed since then, but only in technological
ways (such as the use of monoclonal antibodies); the original
logical uncertainties still exist. Almost every
scientific paper concerning HIV tests still uses antibody tests
as the "gold standard." This is unusual because antibody tests,
even if one ignores the possibility of cross reactions, can
only prove past exposure to a virus, not current infection.
HIV antigen
tests, which are more direct, are only positive in about half
the people who are HIV-antibody positive [McKinney, 1991; Semple,
1991]. This finding is explained away through an immune reaction
which masks the antigen. But, this implies that the HIV infection
is conquered, which is not compatible with the notion that
HIV infection is incurable. Virus cultivation, often erroneously
called 'isolation' is an even older method than antibody testing
for HIV, but apart from being time consuming, expensive and
difficult to perform, it also is negative quite frequently,
and a positive antibody test usually trumps a negative culture
[Layon, 1986] (and vice-versa [Eur Coll, 1991; Imagawa, 1989]).
The major
new test since the early days of AIDS is the Polymerase Chain
Reaction, often called 'viral load' when used for HIV tests.
This also takes a back seat to antibody tests [Roche, 1996],
likely because it is so ultra-sensitive that the risk of a
false positive is high. Furthermore, detecting a snippet of
genetic material (RNA or DNA, depending on the type of test)
does not prove that the entire genome is present, and obviously
does not prove that infectious virus particles are present.
This test is particularly uncertain because the
genetic material does not come from purified virus. Even accepting
the test’s ability to specifically detect HIV DNA or RNA, one
research team estimated that only one infectious virus particle
was present for every 60,000 measured by viral load! [Piatak,
1993; Roche, 1996]
All HIV
tests are indirect, even virus 'isolation' by culturing. Consequently,
some 'gold standard' is necessary to validate them [Cleary,
1987; Abbott, 1997; Meyer, 1987; Daar, 2001; Papadopulos, 2003].
The only standard that is reasonable for a virus is actual
purification direct from body fluids of people who are HIV
infected and the inability to purify from people who are not.
Virus purification would allow the proper characterization
of the virus, so that antigens, antibodies, DNA and RNA that
are generally believed to be from HIV could be proven to be
from HIV (or not).
Without
a ‘gold standard’ for HIV infection the only way to validate
the test is by repeating the test or by comparing it against
different (also unvalidated) tests. This can establish the
reproducibility of the test, but not its specificity (ability
to react with the target and therefore avoid false positives)
or sensitivity (ability to react to cases of infection and
therefore avoid false negatives).
US army
researchers claimed that the specificity of HIV antibody tests
was only 1 false positive out of 135,187 tests [Burke, 1988].
However, although they claimed to have established a high specificity
for antibody tests, they were actually verifying only reproducibility,
and the researchers did not actually prove that the 15 people
from this low risk population who were deemed to have had true
positive tests actually had the virus in them.
Modern
diseases that are blamed on a virus are often little more than
the test because the disease can exist without clinical symptoms.
There is an average of 10 years between becoming HIV positive
and the first signs of AIDS in both rich countries [Munoz,
1995] and poor [Morgan, 2002]. In that time the HIV test is
the only sign that anything is wrong. Worse yet, a low CD4
cell count test can result, in the United States, in a diagnosis
of AIDS (not just HIV infection), again without any clinical
symptoms. But even without symptoms a diagnosis of HIV infection
or AIDS will still often result in treatment because of everyone’s
confidence in the tests.
Other viral
diseases might not have a long incubation period, but the test
still plays the prime role in defining the condition. West
Nile disease, for example, is associated with no illness in
the majority of people who test positive, and serious illness
in only about 1 out of 150 [Petersen, 2002]. The symptoms,
when they do occur, are indistinguishable from many other viral
diseases [CDC, 2002]. This has not resulted in a call to question
the accuracy of the tests. Instead, the certainty
that any symptoms found along with a positive test are due
to the virus is so great that when the symptoms are uncharacteristic
scientists want to add them to the definition, rather than
to ask whether the tests are accurate and whether presence
of a virus is proof of pathogenicity [Glass, 2002; Leis, 2002]
One of
the strange phenomena with HIV and AIDS science was overwhelming
feeling of certainty that crept over scientists
in the mid-1980’s. Only 3.4% of papers in 1984 associated a
reference to Gallo’s original 1984 papers on HIV (HTLV-III)
with "explicit and unqualified" assertions that HIV caused
AIDS but this increased to 25% in 1985 and 62% in 1986, even
when these papers were referenced alone. [Epstein, 1996]
Kary Mullis,
who received the 1993 Nobel for Chemistry (ironically because
of his invention of the Polymerase Chain Reaction) has asked
many scientists for a set of references that constitute proof
that HIV causes AIDS [Duesberg, 1996] and has not yet received
them. Yet, even without this proof being written down in a
scientific paper, certainty still reigns.
SARS illustrates
how quickly researchers can manufacture certainty
today. The mainstream media (which claim to be "responsible")
have ensured us that everyone knows SARS
is caused by a Coronavirus. Reports from Dr. Frank Plummer,
one of Canada’s top virologist, that a diminishing percentage
of patients (30% by mid-April) are testing positive do not
dissuade them from this belief [Altman, 2003]. Everyone knows that there is no possible explanation
for all the patients having some connection with the original
cases other than an infectious agent, even though for some
outbreaks there was no solid connection, and tautologically,
the epidemiologic connection is supposed to be present before
diagnosing SARS (as opposed to some other disease with similar
symptoms). And, everyone also knows that there is no other explanation
for the severity of the disease, certainly not the new phenomenon
of aggressive prescription of steroids and the antiviral ribavirin
that occurred as the fear of the outbreak spread [Koren, 2003].
What HIV/AIDS
science took two years to do, SARS science took only two months
to accomplish. I predict that a Coronavirus test will soon
become part of the SARS case definition, which will immediately
create a 100% correlation between the Coronavirus and SARS
symptoms. Just as with AIDS, the same symptoms without a positive
test will be another disease, and not taken nearly as seriously.
People
demand simple answers to complex problems and modern medical
science delivers. We are told that tests are highly accurate,
that drugs will cure conditions or, if that is not possible,
that they are the best bet. We are told that environmental
conditions play little role in modern, emerging diseases. Alternative
therapy is scoffed at because it has not been ‘proven’ effective
through randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials.
The fundamental
reason why this confidence game continues to be played is because
of human laziness. It is much easier to learn about science
by rote than by examining evidence and making up one’s own
mind. Obviously, not every pronouncement on science can be
taken seriously, so the status of a person or publisher becomes
the way to distinguish between "good science" and "junk science." Many
people do not believe that they have the ability to understand
scientific papers. The media, even most science reporters,
are much more productive if they also adopt this attitude.
Among scientists, there is a hierarchy which is constructed
from the anonymous peer review system for publication and grant
support. This allows longer-serving officers of science to
anonymously subvert the attempts of younger scientists (and
outsiders) to reappraise current dogmas, by denying them the
ability to publish and obtain research funding.
Further Reading
[Abbott,
1997] Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 HIVAB HIV-1 EIA.
Abbott Laboratories. 1997 Jan.
[Altman,
2001] Altman LK. When everything changed at the CDC. NY Times.
2001 Nov 13.
[Altman,
2003] Altman LK. Virus Proves Baffling, Turning Up in Only
40% of a Lab's Test Cases. NY Times. 2003 Apr 24.
[Burke,
1988] Burke DS et al. Measurement of the false positive rate
in a screening program for human immunodeficiency virus infections.
N Engl J Med. 1988; 319(15): 961-4.
[CDC, 2002]
Encephalitis or Meningitis, Arboviral (includes California
serogroup, eastern equine, St. Louis, western equine, West
Nile, Powassan): 2001 Case Definition. CDC. 2002 Sep 6.
[Cleary,
1987] Cleary PD et al. Compulsory premarital screening for
the human immunodeficiency virus: Technical and public health
considerations. JAMA. 1987; 258: 1757-62.
[Daar,
2001] Daar ES et al. Diagnosis of primary HIV-1
infection. Ann Intern Med. 2001 Jan 2; 134(1).
[Duesberg,
1996] Duesberg P et al. Inventing the AIDS virus. Regnery.
1996.
[Epstein,
1996] Epstein S. Impure science: AIDS, activism, and the politics
of knowledge. University of California Press. 1996.
[Eur Collab,
1991] European Collaborative Study. Children born to women
with HIV-1 infection: natural history and risk of transmission.
Lancet. 1991; 337: 253-60.
[Gala,
1992] Gala C et al. Risk of deliberate self-harm and factors
associated with suicidal behaviour among asymptomatic individuals
with human immunodeficiency virus infection. Acta Psychiatr
Scand. 1992 Jul; 86(1): 70-5. Also Serunkuuma R. Living with
HIV/AIDS: a personal testimony. AIDS Health Promot Exch. 1994;
(3):7. Also Call to explore HIV test and suicide link. Nurs
Times. 1994; 90(30):9.
[Glass,
2002] Glass JD et al. Poliomyelitis Due to West Nile Virus.
N Engl J Med. 2002 Oct 17.
[Goodman,
2002] Goodman L. The problem with protease. Poz. 2002 Sep;
33-8.
[Imagawa,
1989] Imagawa DT et al. Human immunodeficiency virus type I
infection in homosexual men who remain seronegative for prolonged
periods. N Engl J Med. 1989 Jun 1; 320(22): 1458-62.
[Koren,
2003] Koren G et al. Ribavirin in the treatment of SARS: A
new trick for an old drug? CMAJ. 2003 May 13; 168(10): 1289-92.
[Layon,
1986] Layon J et al. Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in
the United States: a selective review. Crit Care Med. 1986;
14(9): 819-27.
[Leis,
2002] Leis AA et al. A poliomyelitis-like syndrome from West
Nile Virus infection. N Engl J Med. 2002 Oct 17.
[McKinney,
1991] McKinney RE et al. A multicenter trial of oral zidovudine
in children with advanced human immunodeficiency virus disease.
N Engl J Med. 1991 Apr 11; 324(15): 1018-25.
[Meyer,
1987] Meyer KB et al. Screening for HIV: can we afford the
false positive rate? N Engl J Med. 1987; 317(4): 238-41.
[Morgan,
2002] Morgan D et al. HIV-1 infection in rural Africa: is there
a difference in median time to AIDS and survival compared with
that in industrialized countries? AIDS. 2002; 16: 597-603.
[Muñoz,
1995] Muñoz A et al. Long-term survivors with HIV-1 infection;
incubation period and longitudinal patterns of CD4+ lymphocytes.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 1995 Apr 15; 8(5): 496-505.
[Papadopulos-Eleopulos, 2003] Papadopulos-Eleopulos E
et al. High rates of HIV seropositivity in Africa - alternative
explanation. Int J STD AIDS. 2003; 14: 426.
[Petersen,
2002] Petersen LR et al. West Nile virus: a primer for the
clinician. Ann Intern Med. 2002 Aug 6; 137(3): 173-9.
[Piatak,
1993] Piatak M Jr et al. High levels of HIV-1 in plasma
during all stages of infection determined by competitive PCR.
Science. 1993 Mar 19; 259: 1749-54.
[Roche,
1996] Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor Test. Roche. 1996.
[Sarngadharan,
1984] Sarngadharan MG et al. Antibodies Reactive with Human
T-Lymphotropic Retroviruses (HTLV-III in the Serum of Patients
with AIDS). Science. 1984 May 4; 224: 506-8.
[Semple,
1991] Semple M et al. Direct measurement of viraemia in patients
infected with HIV-1 and its relationship to disease progression
and zidovudine therapy. J Med Virol. 1991; 35: 38-45.
This article was provided
courtesy of Dr. Leonard G. Horowitz
and Tetrahedron Publishing Group
206 North 4th Avenue, Suite 147
Sandpoint, Idaho 83864
http://www.tetrahedron.org
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Office telephone: 208-265-2575;
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See also:
http://www.scifiles.us
http://www.c-cure.com
http://www.tetraassoc.com
http://www.insighthour.net
http://www.SARSscam.com
http://www.originofaids.com
http://www.cureforSARS.net
http://www.deathintheair.com
http://www.DrLenHorowitz.com
http://www.allaboutsmallpox.com
http://www.westnilevirusscam.com
http://www.healingcelebrations.com
http://www.1st-in-meal-replacement.com
http://www.americanreddoublecross.com
http://www.healthyworlddistributing.com
http://www.prophecyandpreparedness.com
Visit also:
www.vaclib.org
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