I was reading an article in The Economist a few days ago about hypertension, and I couldn't help but notice that it had a lot of mistakes and misconceptions in it.
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9033095
And then I started wondering exactly how bad the rest of it was. The Economist is a quite well-respected publication, although obviously not a scientific journal. Has anyone else noticed glaring errors in explanations for laymen in similar magazines (like Time or National Geographic) that are actually entirely wrong?
I'd always be wary of tabloid articles, but I'd thought that I could trust these sorts of publications to give me a basic idea of the subject. It seems that this reporter has read only one research paper about hypertension, if that.
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9033095
And then I started wondering exactly how bad the rest of it was. The Economist is a quite well-respected publication, although obviously not a scientific journal. Has anyone else noticed glaring errors in explanations for laymen in similar magazines (like Time or National Geographic) that are actually entirely wrong?
I'd always be wary of tabloid articles, but I'd thought that I could trust these sorts of publications to give me a basic idea of the subject. It seems that this reporter has read only one research paper about hypertension, if that.