this post was submitted on 20 Apr 2024
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The person I am talking about is Dr. Palaniappan Manickam aka Dr. Pal, a board-certified gastroenterologist from Sacramento, California, who is also a YouTuber. He's created various videos targeting Indian netizens, most of which are decent, but not without adding his own twist of misinformation, that are considered unscientific - some of them have been debunked here and here (auto-captions available).

I can't help but think why YouTube would immediately remove videos that spread misinformation, but only when it affects the western world, but not the other part? Clearly, this guy's video is in English, he participates in collaborations with other misinformation-peddling YouTubers - the consequences of which a few percent of the billion people in India have to face - which is still, a lot of people? Sure, you can complain that it is the responsibility of the Indian government - but they are themselves in this business of pseudo-science. When there's no one taking responsibility, I can't help but feel helpless about the lies people will hear.

Edit: And to why this matters, there's an on-going case in the Supreme Court of India. Said "guru" sold Coronil kit, and mocked dying doctors. What did the kit do? It had high concentration of lead. Dr. Cyriac Abby Philips fought against it - and the system tried to punish him.

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

No, not missing the point. Your comment shows I'm right on point.

This kind of studies is not something a random person, or even a trained nurse, can do on their spare time. You couldn't just give apples to some people and look a week later for results. You need control group, you need to account for extra factors.

And before the experiment you need to have a reason for it. Can a drug that works for other coronavirus work here? Some compound that has the opposite effects mitigate the symptoms?

Why would even check "apples"? They might consider a component that exists on apples, but why apple itself? Unless there's an external event that correlates apples with a result, it's a bit weird.

Natural sciences without scientific method are not science. If you don't test and validate the hypothesis, you're just making things up. Without it, I can say apples cure baldness and blame big pharma for not letting this being published.