Guest guest Posted February 7, 2006 Report Share Posted February 7, 2006 > Results: The results showed a significant inverse trend between whole-grain intake and the metabolic syndrome (P for trend = 0.005) and mortality from cardiovascular disease (P for trend = 0.04), independent of demographic, lifestyle, and dietary factors. -------------------------------------- There are hunders of observational studies like this, among them studies saying coffee is bad, coffee is good, coffee prevents cancer, coffee causes cancer, etc., etc. The problem is, the devil is in the details. The people writing such studies recognize that association is not causality, and they usually put in a standard statistical disclaimer to this effect, and saying that their results need to be confirmed by an interventional trial. But then everyone goes and treats the study without this appropriate caution. In observational studies, investigators make an attempt to control for confounding factors as best they can; e.g., " demographic, lifestyle, and dietary factors " , but the problem is, that such statistical control manipulations are far from perfect, and can sometimes even introduce bias into a study. I would never change my own dietary preferences based on an observational study. Otherwise, I would have no peace, since they often keep coming up with different and conflicting answers. When you see such a study, you need to ask a common sense question: OK, why is this one geezer eating whole wheat bread, and other one eating plain white Wonder bread? These dietary choices don't just happen for no reason. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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