Stats
More on the retroactive prayer study (June 10, 2005)
Category: Corroborating evidence
I discuss an interesting study on the effects of prayer (Leibovici
2001) published in BMJ, where the researcher prayed over a set of charts that represented
outcomes occurring four to ten years earlier. When these results were compared to a control
group of charts that were unprayed for, there was a statistically significant difference
between the two groups.
This study flies in the face of what we know about causation (causes always precede
effects), and another article in BMJ (Olshansky
2003) tries to develop a plausible mechanism for retrospective causation.
It's an interesting study that I discuss in a counterpoint to biological plausibility in
my book on Statistical Evidence. A couple of recently published articles in the same journal
also comment on this study, but I cannot access these articles easily because BMJ now limits
access to some of their content for 12 months. When the 12 month window has expired, I may
comment on these articles further.
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J. P Bishop and V. J Stenger Retroactive prayer: lots of history, not much mystery, and no
science BMJ, December 18, 2004; 329(7480): 1444 - 1446
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M G M. Hunink Does evidence based medicine do more good than harm? BMJ, October 30, 2004;
329(7473): 1051 - 1051.
07/08/2008.