A decade after a landmark study proved that feeding peanut products to young babies could prevent development of life-threatening allergies, new research finds the change has made a big difference in the real world.
Peanut allergies began to decline in the U.S. after guidance first issued in 2015 upended medical practice by recommending introducing the allergen to infants starting as early as 4 months. The rate of peanut allergies in children ages 0 to 3 fell by more than 27% after guidance for high-risk kids was first issued in 2015, and by more than 40% after the recommendations were expanded in 2017.
Did you?
The problem is the scientists already knew the answer, too. It’s pretty well known by the evidence-based medicine community as a massive fuckup by the medical establishment that sets guidelines. A director of the Evidence-Based Medicine and Public Health Research Group at Johns Hopkins dedicated a chapter on it in his book.
That chapter explains that pediatric immunologists already knew guidelines for young children to avoid peanuts weren’t supported by science (they violated immune tolerance, a basic principle of immunology) and advised physicians they trained to ignore it.
full explanation
The book establishes that medical science can be susceptible to dogmatism & groupthink indolent to examine & update knowledge once it settles into established practice even when it lacks rigorous, scientific evidence. When they discover they are wrong, the establishment tends to be slow in recognizing it & correcting itself: rather than boldly & openly admit they were flatout wrong, they often prefer a face- (& liability-?) saving approach that quietly updates guidelines, slowly backpedals, and lets new practices overtake old with time. The mixed track record of major health recommendations in modern medicine follows a pattern established in the book:
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) 2000 recommendation
is a case where they did not follow evidence-based medicine. It’s a case of copycat guidelines: they copied a 1998 UK health department recommendation. That recommendation was based on
and referred to a single study lacking support for that statement.
Predictably
Immunologists had objected.
Then they tried to dissuade with a study.
The medical community maintained the guidelines & wouldn’t fund studies to corroborate.
Several years later
It was “an embarrassingly simple study” the AAP failed to demand.
The whole ordeal is the predictable outcome of medical guideline associations correcting a well-documented disaster they recklessly created & hope to quietly sweep under the rug. How those associations haven’t been sued into oblivion for incompetent negligence is a real mystery.
The comment above yours is right: it entirely is as stupid as it seems.