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. 2014 Sep;5(5):563-5.
doi: 10.3945/an.114.006577.

Unscientific beliefs about scientific topics in nutrition

Unscientific beliefs about scientific topics in nutrition

Andrew W Brown et al. Adv Nutr. 2014 Sep.

Erratum in

  • Adv Nutr. 2014 Nov;5(6):860

Abstract

Humans interact with food daily. Such repeated exposure creates a widespread, superficial familiarity with nutrition. Personal familiarity with nutrition from individual and cultural perspectives may give rise to beliefs about food not grounded in scientific evidence. In this summary of the session entitled “Unscientific Beliefs about Scientific Topics in Nutrition,” we discuss accumulated work illustrating and quantifying potentially misleading practices in the conduct and, more so, reporting of nutrition science along with proposed approaches to amelioration. We begin by defining “unscientific beliefs” and from where such beliefs may come, followed by discussing how large bodies of nutritional epidemiologic observations not only create highly improbable patterns of association but implausible magnitudes of implied effect. Poor reporting practices, biases, and methodologic issues that have distorted scientific understandings of nutrition are presented, followed by potential influences of conflicts of interest that extend beyond financial considerations. We conclude with recommendations for improving the conduct, reporting, and communication of nutrition-related research to ground discussions in evidence rather than solely on beliefs.

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Conflict of interest statement

Author disclosures: As presented at the symposium, in the past 12 months, A. W. Brown served as a scientific consultant for CE Outcomes. D. M. Bier is a member of the ConAgra Foods Scientific Advisory Board and a member of the Board of Trustees of the International Life Sciences Institute Research Foundation and of the Advisory Committee to the International Council on Amino Acid Science. He also acts as a scientific consultant to Ferrero International and previously provided consultation to a wide variety of food companies. He does not own stock in, or have other ownership interests in, any of the companies to which he provides scientific advice. As presented at the symposium, within the past 12 months, D. B. Allison received grant or research support from Pfizer, Mars, Coca-Cola Company, Pepsi, and Cooking Light, served as a scientific board member or consultant for Eisai and DuPont Nutrition and Health, and received other financial or material support/honoraria from Kellogg Company. M. B. Cope is an employee of DuPont Nutrition and Health. J. P. A. Ioannidis has no conflicts of interest.

References

    1. Casazza K, Fontaine KR, Astrup A, Birch LL, Brown AW, Bohan Brown MM, Durant N, Dutton G, Foster EM, Heymsfield SB, et al. Myths, presumptions, and facts about obesity. N Engl J Med 2013;368:446–54 - PMC - PubMed
    1. Schoenfeld JD, Ioannidis JP. Is everything we eat associated with cancer? A systematic cookbook review. Am J Clin Nutr 2013;97:127–34 - PubMed
    1. Brown AW, Bohan Brown MM, Allison DB. Belief beyond the evidence: using the proposed effect of breakfast on obesity to show 2 practices that distort scientific evidence. Am J Clin Nutr 2013;98:1298–308 - PMC - PubMed
    1. Cope MB, Allison DB. White hat bias: examples of its presence in obesity research and a call for renewed commitment to faithfulness in research reporting. Int J Obes (Lond) 2010;34:84–8 - PMC - PubMed
    1. Gadbury GL, Allison DB. Inappropriate fiddling with statistical analyses to obtain a desirable p-value: tests to detect its presence in published literature. PLoS One 2012;7:e46363. - PMC - PubMed

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