Saturday, December 22, 2018 at 11:44AM
Drew Wolfe

Researchers Show Parachutes Don't Work, But There's A Catch

"Research published in a major medical journal concludes that a parachute is no more effective than an empty backpack at protecting you from harm if you have to jump from an aircraft."

"But before you leap to any rash conclusions, you had better hear the whole story."

"The gold standard for medical research is a study that randomly assigns volunteers to try an intervention or to go without one and be part of a control group."

"For some reason, nobody has ever done a randomized controlled trial of parachutes. In fact, medical researchers often use the parachute example when they argue they don't need to do a study because they're so sure they already know something works."

"Cardiologist Robert Yeh, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and attending physician at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, got a wicked idea one day. He and his colleagues would actually attempt the parachute study to make a few choice points about the potential pitfalls of research shortcuts."

"They started by talking to their seatmates on airliners."

Article originally appeared on WorldWideWolfe II (http://drewhwolfe.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.