OK. I'll do my best, though there probably will be left gaps in the explanation that others might have to fill:
when i went to ayurvedic school, the teacher said that double-blind testing is done for 'safety', that you cannot get any valid results unless you use subjects who have something in common.
The test subjects do in fact have something in common: The illness that the medication is supposed to help treating. That is the one and only variable that we initially need to check upon. That the group is
otherwise as varied as possible is deemed a good thing, because that way, we can see that the treatment is effective all over the range of ordinary differences people have.
he said how can fat pills be tested on skinny people? how can those results be valid?
My previous post dealt with this particular claim. I will reword myself in order to (hopefully) make it even clearer:
If overweight is the problem, and someone claims he's made a pill that will deal with this problem, a
proper double-blind test will do the following:
It will seek out people that, to some extent or other, are overweight. Young, old, man, woman, it doesn't matter. It's the fact that they are fat that counts.
Now for the next phase. Randomly, they are split into two groups (it doesn't in fact need to be physically split, as long as there are some ways to know which group person A belongs to).
Then one group will be given the fat pill, while the other group receives a placebo.
And nobody will know which pill they will get. This is the heart of the double-blind test, because this eliminates the phenomenon known as "observer's bias".
Of course, in the case of the fat pill, we have a rather objective method of checking the effectiveness: Put them on the weight. But even so, a control group will be needed. Perhaps people are eating less, or more, or differently, while taking the pill. Or they are excercising more (or less). If you're part of such an experiment (which naturally will span over at least a couple of months), you will be much more concious of what you eat and how active you are, and you may be changing your behaviour accordingly.
But thanks to double-blind testing, it won't matter if such behaviour emerges. Even if the placebo group starts losing weight, if the fat pill is really more effective, the real group should lose significantly more weight.
he said double-blind tests don't work.
A simple falsehood. Double-blind tests have shown time and again to be the best practical method of testing a medicine's effectiveness.
he said he had participated in them and they are hooey.
Either he went to a rather dubious test, or his basic misunderstanding on how such a test is conducted distorted his experience.
he said how can you test a pill for high blood pressure on people who have low blood pressure.
Again, same as with the fat pills.
he said double-blind tests are just to test the safety of an item.
Nope. There are other kinds of tests that will deal with the safety of an item. At least the short-term effects. Sometimes, a medicine might have a bad effect in the long run, but it can take years and even decades to manifest itself.
please do not respond with put-downs. please give me scientific answers, i need to ponder this.
I've tried my best giving answers describing the method of double-blind tests. I am not a scientist, but the principle of double-blind testing should be understood even by a layman as myself. (Of course, expressing this principle is another issue, and I may have misunderstood aspects of it.)
With regards to ayurveda. I have no knowledge about ayurveda, and won't insult anyone's intelligence (including mine) by taking a peek-a-boo at Google to search on some fast info on this. Someone that's got the real knowledge (or at least know where to find proper info.) should be able to tell you more about this.