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Medicine Television Science

Columbia University Doctors Ask For Dr. Mehmet Oz's Dismissal 320

circletimessquare writes Dr. Mehmet Oz serves as vice chairman of Columbia University Medical Center's department of surgery. He is a respected cardiothoracic surgeon but his television show has been accused of pushing snake oil. Now other doctors at Columbia University want Dr. Oz kicked off the medical school faculty. Dr. Oz has responded on his Facebook account: "I bring the public information that will help them on their path to be their best selves. We provide multiple points of view, including mine which is offered without conflict of interest. That doesn't sit well with certain agendas which distort the facts. For example, I do not claim that GMO foods are dangerous, but believe that they should be labeled like they are in most countries around the world." In their letter, the doctors accuse Dr. Oz of quackery: "Dr. Oz has repeatedly shown disdain for science and for evidence-based medicine, as well as baseless and relentless opposition to the genetic engineering of food crops. Worst of all, he has manifested an egregious lack of integrity by promoting quack treatments and cures in the interest of personal financial gain."
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Columbia University Doctors Ask For Dr. Mehmet Oz's Dismissal

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  • he's irresponsibly pandering to ignorance to raise his profile

    ignorant think he's informing them and giving them "choices"

    but this is merely a logical fallacy

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F... [wikipedia.org]

    a choice between quackery and sound science is not a choice

    it's preying on the science illiteracy of many and steering them to make uneducated bad choices that hurt their health. all to turn a quick buck and bask in the blessings of idiots

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Genuine curiosity, what is he advocating that actually endangers his patients (or anyone else's) health?

      • by dcollins117 ( 1267462 ) on Saturday April 18, 2015 @12:04AM (#49498553)

        Genuine curiosity, what is he advocating that actually endangers his patients (or anyone else's) health?

        Well, the short answer is he isn't, directly. That statement sounds like he's trying to kill his viewers. He's not.

        The long answer has to do with his promotion of weight-loss dietary supplements.Since supplements aren't regulated by the FDA, consumers can't always be sure what they're taking. There are some sketchy companies out there and sometimes what's in the pill is not what's on the label.

        He also didn't do himself any favors by using incautious language to promote the supplements - things like "magic weight loss cure" and "miracle in a bottle". This earned him a stern talking to by a Senate subcommittee on consumer protection about a year ago.

        In his defense he points out these products have studies to show they are somewhat effective when combined with diet and exercise and it's not his fault if companies are misrepresenting product.

      • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Saturday April 18, 2015 @04:39AM (#49499195)

        His previous endorsements include numerous dubious weight-loss products, reiki, homoepathy and faith healing. He used to be a doctor, but then he became a TV personality too - and his medical 'advice' on TV is driven by purely commercial motives: He says whatever brings in the ratings and keeps the viewers returning. Even the British Medical Journal has condemned him for the lack of scientific backing for many of his recommendations.

        It makes more sense if you read some of the leaked documents from Sony relating to the show. They shed a bit of light on what's going on: Sony are trying to launch him to greater fame by using Oprah as a model, and issue directives regarding what he is supposed to endorse or avoid saying based on market research. The documents indicate some concern from producers that his show was focusing on weight loss and discouraging repeat viewing (No-one likes to be reminded they are fat), so he was told to find something that viewers would really like to hear. Like some miracle cures.

    • "in my opinion this guy is like Jenny McCarthy"

      When Jenny McCarthy found out that what she was saying was wrong and harmful, she largely retracted her entire position. Oz knows what he's saying is wrong and harmful, but he keeps doing it, for the money.

    • by golodh ( 893453 )
      Funny how many people creep out of the woodwork to condemn someone for being "populist" when he takes a stance that sits ill with commercial interests. Why is it so un-scientific to speak out for labeling GMO foods so that they are recognizable?

      People on the other hand who pander to scientifically illiterate conservative underbelly feelings by insisting that evolution be treated as "just a theory" and be treated on par with wild flights of fancy like "intelligent design" on the other hand are known as "de

  • by voislav98 ( 1004117 ) on Friday April 17, 2015 @09:07PM (#49497935)
    As long as he was peddling magical dietary supplements and weight loss pills he was a lovable scamp and was allowed to carry on with his mischief. But as soon as he dared cross Monsanto, he is a quack that must be squashed.
    • there's nothing wrong with hating monsanto, the corporate behemoth with unclean intentions

      there is everything wrong with questiong GMO, the science

      the science and the corporation are not the same thing

      to confuse the two is ignorance and dangerous propaganda

      besides, people were disgusted by his quackery and snake oil salesmanship independent of and long before monsanto

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          "I just don't want to eat a food that manufactures its own pesticide"

          then you don't want to eat any plant that has ever grown

          plants have been in an evolutionary arms race with the creatures that eat them for billions of years, producing a plethora of toxic compounds to kill and maim that which eats them

          and the evolution of animal's livers have been doing their best to keep up

          in fact many flavor compounds and drugs from plants were originally evoled to kill us, or are meant to kill another species

          your irrati

          • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Friday April 17, 2015 @10:44PM (#49498273)

            Making a plant manufacture its own insecticide is one thing. Modifying it so that it can withstand being soaked with ever-increasing quantities and varieties of synthetic pesticides is another.

            Weeds are gradually evolving to resist this chemical onslaught. Most people would rather not have themselves subjected to such evolutionary pressure within their lifetimes.

            The weeds are destined to eventually win this arms race anyway, so this huge experiment in chemical exposure to the US population is eventually going to be for naught.

          • Why do you omit the most important fact when attempting to conflate genetic modification with evolution? You know, that pesky fact that evolution maintains balance because ALL creatures are evolving. GMO foods do not.

            The second most important fact is that people in the US are not demanding a ban, they are demanding labeling so that they can choose. Your statements, nor the big GMO companies, address that simple fact. They treat the request for label as if it were a ban.

            Lastly, evolution does not allow t

        • by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 17, 2015 @09:56PM (#49498125)

          You do realize that every plant manufactures its own pesticides, right? Tomatoes, potatoes, and eggplants have nicotine. Chile has capsaicin. Pretty much anything with flavor, especially spices, are the result of pesticides. It's in everything. http://tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/06/06/synthetic-v-natural-pesticides/?_r=0

          Want to reevaluate your stance on eating food that manufacture's its own pesticides? No? Then you are ignorant of science.

          • by Jane Q. Public ( 1010737 ) on Friday April 17, 2015 @10:25PM (#49498217)

            You do realize that every plant manufactures its own pesticides, right?

            You and the other earlier poster are missing the point. Or at the very least, a large part of it.

            "Roundup-Ready" crops were supposed to REDUCE the use of pesticides. Instead, the practical effect is that it has ENABLED more use of glyphosate. As a real result, the use of glyphosate and the level of glyphosate in some food products has multiplied.

            These are "perverse consequences". As another poster mentioned, there has been "voluntary" passing of the glyphosate-resistant gene to what are normally considered noxious weeds, meaning its widespread use is probably self-defeating, in exactly the same sense as over-use of antibiotics.

            To say that GMO foods are "safe" therefore is naive at best.

            • by ChromeAeonium ( 1026952 ) on Saturday April 18, 2015 @07:40AM (#49499521)

              You have a fundamental misunderstanding of the technology. Glyphosate use hasn't just go up; it has displaced other herbicides (including some harsh alternatives like atrazine, or just soil eroding tillage) and allowed farmers to hit the field with a single post emergent application of one of what is actually one of the more beneign herbicides out there. I wouldn't go drinking it, but glyphosate is hardly one of the scarier agrochemicals.

              So yeah, glyphosate use is up, but so what? That's better than the alternative. Do you have a better weed management solution? Because if you do the farmers of the world would love to hear it; it isn't like they spend all that money on glyphosate for nothing. What you are saying is like saying that a line of cocaine is better than a glass of wine because the cocaine weighs less; you neglect to take into consideration that not all herbicides are equal. Furthermore, you consider only the one option against an ideal, when in reality, it is one of several options, and the ideal is not one of them.

          • Capsaicin isn't just a pesticide - it's a very nifty highly-selective pesticide that affects only those creatures that cannot spread the plant's seeds, while doing nothing at all to those that make good propagation vectors. It deters consumption by all mammal species, except for the one exception that actually enjoys inflicting pain upon itsself.

        • All plants manufacture their own pesticides. That's why they still exist. We happen to be immune to some of them, and hence we call some plants edible.

          So yes everyone is just fine eating food that manufactures its own pesticide.

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            Agreed, but it might not be smart to eat plants that manufacture an unaccustomed pesticide or an unusually large amount of it.

            • But if that pesticide has no biological mechanism of interacting with humans, being scared of it is stupid.

              I run Linux, hence, I'm not particularly scared of windows viruses.

              • by sjames ( 1099 )

                *IF* that pesticide has no biological mechanism of interacting with humans, being scared of it is stupid.

                The pesticides in the plants we eat now other than the GMOs have had a thousand years of human testing. Further, if they were at all inclined to cross with some wild non-food species to gain something more toxic to humans, they more than likely would have by now.

                Compare to something that has had zero years of human testing and in some cases no animal testing.

        • Monsanto products are apparently Round-Up resistant, so you can spray herbicides on otherwise edible plants.

          The objections are not against breeding pesticide generation. The objections are against being

          1) Unnaturally bred, and therefore largely untested in nature, even if by science
          2) Okay with large amounts of herbicides, which will end up in the herb

          I assume you drink round-up regularly and have no objection to it in your vegetables, if you object to the objections.

          And your objection to resistant weeds i

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Glyphosate itself is actually pretty harmless (the included surfactants are an unknown as they're not tested), the real danger is when the weeds become resistant and we have to switch to more toxic herbicides. Same with insecticides, BK is very safe but the more insects are exposed to it the more chance of resistance evolving and the farmers needing more toxic insecticides. It's an arms race where the bugs will win.
            As an aside, I took a pesticide applicators course a long time back.The guy giving it did tal

        • Soon to be released by Monsanto: Round-Up Ready farm workers

      • there is everything wrong with questiong GMO, the science

        This is an oxymoron.

    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Friday April 17, 2015 @10:05PM (#49498151)

      As long as he was peddling magical dietary supplements and weight loss pills he was a lovable scamp and was allowed to carry on with his mischief. But as soon as he dared cross Monsanto, he is a quack that must be squashed.

      Here's the relevant portions of the letter in question:
      As described here and here, as well as in other publications, Dr. Oz has repeatedly shown disdain for science and for evidence-based medicine, as well as baseless and relentless opposition to the genetic engineering of food crops. Worst of all, he has manifested an egregious lack of integrity by promoting quack treatments and cures in the interest of personal financial gain.

      Thus, Dr. Oz is guilty of either outrageous conflicts of interest or flawed judgements about what constitutes appropriate medical treatments, or both. Whatever the nature of his pathology, members of the public are being misled and endangered, which makes Dr. Oz's presence on the faculty of a prestigious medical institution unacceptable.

      I see one reference to GMO opposition and two or three references to quack science and conflicts of interest. Dr. Oz's rebuttal on the other hand only specifically mentions the GMO's.

      It's a clever PR ploy on Dr. Oz's part, focus on the milder part of the accusation and suggest a conspiracy. Meanwhile ignore the more serious accusations that are much harder to defend.

      • Most scientists who know something about it are pro-GMO. Even avowedly liberal scientists are pro-GMO.
      • Dr. Oz has repeatedly shown disdain for science and for evidence-based medicine, as well as baseless and relentless opposition to the genetic engineering of food crops

        WTF, moron, "relentless" is not "one". And of course he's going to eat the low hanging fruit. That's what his audience likes, appreciates, and wants. That's why people oppose him, because he has an audience that wants the low hanging fruit.

        I'm over 40, my fruit hangs low. His audience is likely to like my fruit nonetheless. I'm not judgin

      • Yes. but it's one reference that has literally no relevance to any other part. Every other thing mentioned has to do with medicine, and then one random point relating to agricultural science? It's like they threw in a bit relating to his views on the Keystone XL pipeline, why would you bring that up? It certainly has no bearing on his appointment, and it makes them look as though they have an another unspoken agenda.

        If it wasn't important to their argument, it shouldn't have been brought up.

      • by s.petry ( 762400 )

        I see no substance to the claims of quackery, just empty claims. Yeah, he pissed off Monsanto or Bayer or one of those, because that is the only thing they will firmly claim.

        Ask the important question: How long has he been on TV and just now someone want's to claim he's a quack? Sorry, his format has not changed, nor the advice he is giving out. Then look at cui bono, and it's obvious what is going on.

        Sadly, there are many religious zealots who claim to believe in science, but can not differentiate fact

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      The charges (as given in the summary) didn't explicitly mention Monstanto. Personally, I believe that GMO foods are a good idea...as long as they aren't patented, and are evaluated for safety by people who don't have a financial stake in the result.

      Unfortunately....

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      Most guilty people will immediately try to become the victim. Ignore the fact that I convince gullible people to buy junk that at best is useless and at worst will harm them. Ignore the fact that I use my medical degree to trick people. Look at the big bad corporation over here that wants to attack me. Ignore the fact that I am in the arms of a big bad corporation that airs my tv show and wants rating no matter what.

      My problem with Dr. Oz is not that he appears to be a unethical charletan that will prost

    • Society is run by interest groups. Money creates its own interest groups (e.g., Monsanto), but not every interest group is some type of money. For example, the people who got the UN to ban land-mines -- was just a bunch of average Joes. (Personally I think this is a mistake, because landmine technology has come a long way.) The scientists against Oz are just a bunch of average Joe scientists.
  • I thought Jamie Oliver comprehensively put this guy on the quack-heap: https://youtu.be/WA0wKeokWUU [youtu.be]
  • trying to correct bad impressions that my mother gets from this guy.

    I mentioned it to my internist and he told me most doctors he knows consider him a quack.

    Amazing how some people will sell their soul for money and television appearances.

  • You can't fire a faculty member because outside the scope of his duties he expresses an opinion you don't like -- even if it's a clearly crackpot opinion. If you could, Stanford would have kicked Linus Pauling out when he became a Vitamin C crackpot.

    The difference, though, is that Pauling was a sincere crackpot -- brilliant people are often susceptible to crackpottery because they're so used to being more right than their neighbors. Dr. Oz is a snake-oil salesman; when he's faced with people who are educa

  • That makes it clear. Nothing to do but sit back and wait for Oprah's spawn to burst from his chest.
  • by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Saturday April 18, 2015 @01:44AM (#49498819)

    ... and like... alternative crystal healing... so... why is he not simply tased when he sets foot on the property? Possibly have some gentlemen run out with a big butterfly net, then give him a shirt with really long sleeves... and then give him a nice quite room with pillows on the walls.

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

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