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Million-Dollar Project Aims to Expose Bad Medical Research

Million-Dollar Project Aims to Expose Bad Medical Research

Gizmodo07-06-2025
Armed with funding, algorithms, and a tip line, this new effort aims to dig corrupt studies out of medical literature before they do real-world harm.
A new initiative from the watchdogs behind Retraction Watch is taking aim at flawed or faked medical science research to the tune of nearly $1 million.
The Center for Scientific Integrity just launched the Medical Evidence Project, a two-year effort to identify published medical research with a negative effect on health guidelines—and to make sure people actually hear about it.
Equipped with a $900,000 grant from Open Philanthropy and a core team of up to five investigators, the project will use forensic metascience tools to identify issues in scientific articles, and report its findings via Retraction Watch, the foremost site for scientific watchdogging.
'We originally set up the Center for Scientific Integrity as a home for Retraction Watch, but we always hoped we would be able to do more in the research accountability space,' said Ivan Oransky, executive director of the Center and co-founder of Retraction Watch, in a post announcing the grant. 'The Medical Evidence Project allows us to support critical analysis and disseminate the findings.'
According to Nature, these flawed and falsified documents are vexing because they skew meta-analyses—reviews that combine the findings from multiple studies to draw more statistically robust conclusions. If one or two bunk studies make it into a meta-analysis, they can tip the scales on health policy.
In 2009, to name one case, a European guideline recommended the use of beta-blockers during non-cardiac surgery, based on turn-of-the-millennium research that was later called into question. Years later, an independent review suggested that the guidance may have contributed to 10,000 deaths per year in the UK.
Led by James Heathers, a science integrity consultant, the team's plan is to build software tools, chase down leads from anonymous whistleblowers, and pay peer reviewers to check their work. They're aiming to identify at least 10 flawed meta-analyses a year.
The team is picking its moment wisely. As Gizmodo previously reported, AI-generated junk science is flooding the academic digital ecosystem, showing up in everything from conference proceedings to peer-reviewed journals. A study published in Harvard Kennedy School's Misinformation Review found that two-thirds of sampled papers retrieved through Google Scholar contained signs of GPT-generated text—some even in mainstream scientific outlets. About 14.5% of those bogus studies focused on health.
That's particularly alarming because Google Scholar doesn't distinguish between peer-reviewed studies and preprints, student papers, or other less-rigorous work. And once this kind of bycatch gets pulled into meta-analyses or cited by clinicians, it's hard to untangle the consequences. 'If we cannot trust that the research we read is genuine,' one researcher told Gizmodo, 'we risk making decisions based on incorrect information.'
We've already seen how nonsense can slip through. In 2021, Springer Nature retracted over 40 papers from its Arabian Journal of Geosciences—studies so incoherent they read like AI-generated Mad Libs. Just last year, the publisher Frontiers had to pull a paper featuring anatomically impossible AI-generated images of rat genitals.
We've entered the era of digital fossils, in which AI models trained on web-scraped data are beginning to preserve and propagate nonsense phrases as if they were real scientific terms. For example, earlier this year a group of researchers found a garbled set of words from a 1959 biology paper embedded in the outputs of large language models including OpenAI's GPT-4o.
In that climate, the Medical Evidence Project's goal feels more like triage than cleanup. The team is dealing with a deluge of flawed information, hiding in plain sight, and plenty of which can have very real health consequences if taken at face value.
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Historic Medicaid cuts to come as Trump signs domestic policy bill
Historic Medicaid cuts to come as Trump signs domestic policy bill

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Historic Medicaid cuts to come as Trump signs domestic policy bill

This story was originally published on Healthcare Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Healthcare Dive newsletter. President Donald Trump on Friday signed Republicans' major tax and domestic policy bill into law, setting into motion massive cuts to Medicaid that could remove millions of people from the safety-net insurance coverage. The legislation was sent to Trump's desk on Thursday, after months of rancorous debate in Congress. The Senate narrowly passed its version of the bill earlier this week, calling in Vice President JD Vance to cast the tiebreaking vote. House Republicans then scrambled to get their caucus in line, as moderates raised concerns about the Senate's steeper cuts to Medicaid and conservatives lambasted the legislation's growing contribution to the national debt. But the lower chamber ultimately voted to pass the megabill 218 to 214, nearly entirely along party lines. Only two Republicans, Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky and Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, declined to support the legislation. GOP lawmakers cheered its passage Thursday. Rep. Brett Guthrie, R-Ky., chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, said the law 'strengthens Medicaid for those who need it most.' Here are some of the healthcare provisions in the law: Medicaid work requirements. Some beneficiaries in the safety-net insurance program — including childless adults and those with children older than 14 — would need to work, volunteer or go to school at least 80 hours a month to stay enrolled. Medicaid eligibility. States would be required to check enrollees' eligibility for the coverage every six months instead of yearly. The law also prevents the HHS from enforcing a regulation that aimed to streamline eligibility and enrollment for Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program. Cost-sharing in Medicaid. Higher-income beneficiaries would have to pay cost-sharing up to $35 per service for some care. Provider taxes. The law freezes provider taxes — arrangements states use to finance their share of Medicaid funding — in states that haven't expanded Medicaid, and gradually lowers allowed rates in expansion states. State-directed payments. The arrangements that allow states to make supplemental payments for services covered in Medicaid managed care contracts face new restrictions. The law directs the HHS to revise that payment limit from the average commercial rate to Medicare rates in expansion states, and 10% above the Medicare rate in non-expansion states. Affordable Care Act subsidy verification. The law requires pre-enrollment verification of eligibility for premium tax credits that subsidize the cost of health plans on the ACA exchanges. Limit immigrant eligibility for Medicare, Medicaid and ACA premium tax credits. Only green card holders and certain classes of immigrants would be eligible for these programs. Cut Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood. The law blocks Medicaid funds for services offered by abortion providers like Planned Parenthood for one year. Rural healthcare support. The policy includes a $50 billion fund to help states support providers and hospitals in rural communities. Nursing home staffing. The HHS is prohibited from enforcing a Biden-era regulation that would have required long-term care facilities to increase staffing and have a registered nurse on-site. The Medicaid provisions of the law have been some of the most contentious. The policies reduce federal spending on the safety-net coverage by $1 trillion, according to a Tuesday estimate by health policy researcher KFF. Nearly 12 million additional people would become uninsured by 2034 under the law, according to an analysis published Saturday by the Congressional Budget Office. As such, the policies have been lambasted by the healthcare sector. Hospitals worry the growing number of uninsured patients would cause uncompensated care to soar, weighing on their bottom lines. Rural hospitals and providers that serve large numbers of Medicaid patients would be particularly hard hit, forcing them to cut services to close their doors altogether, experts say. Dr. Bobby Mukkamala, president of the American Medical Association, said in a statement Thursday the impact from the law 'will reverberate for years,' leaving patients sicker with less access to care. Chip Kahn, president and CEO of the Federation of American Hospitals, urged Congress to take action to mitigate damage from the law's healthcare provisions by extending enhanced financial assistance for people who buy coverage on the ACA marketplaces, which is set to lapse at the end of the year. 'Time is of the essence,' he said in a Thursday statement. 'Without action extending these credits, we will see the gains to health care access and affordability our country has made over the years further evaporate, and too many will not be able to pick up the slack.' Recommended Reading Senate passes Trump's spending bill with massive Medicaid cuts

People Are Sharing The Signs From Your Body That You Should Never Ignore, And It's Critical Info
People Are Sharing The Signs From Your Body That You Should Never Ignore, And It's Critical Info

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People Are Sharing The Signs From Your Body That You Should Never Ignore, And It's Critical Info

Sometimes, it's easy to brush off that persistent headache as stress or dismiss unusual fatigue as just being busy. But these seemingly small symptoms can also be your body's way of sounding an alarm bell. When u/Original_Giraffe_830 asked what signs from your body you should never ignore, the responses revealed just how crucial it is to listen to these internal messages. From subtle changes that saved lives to symptoms that seemed minor but turned out to be medical emergencies, here are some warning signs that deserve your immediate attention: 1."Heavy imbalance and dizziness, especially when paired with a headache. If some limbs also feel numb, you might already be in the middle of a stroke and part of your brain is dying." —u/Fatal_Explorer 2."The way your body smells. Usually you won't notice because we become kinda numb to our own scent, but if someone tells you you started to smell different (and not in a good way), it's probably because there's something wrong. My mom kept saying that my dad smelled like truffle and that it was overwhelming. I personally couldn't really smell it, so I didn't understand. Later on, he was diagnosed with diabetes and started taking care of himself — changing his diet and taking the meds he was prescribed — and my mom couldn't smell that scent anymore." —u/irondessert "Super Smellers can also detect Parkinson's. This woman smelled it on her husband before he was diagnosed. Docs set up a clinical trial using her sniffer. She smelled the shirts of people with and without a diagnosis, but she got one 'wrong,' and researchers chalked her sniffer up to being bogus. Until, a few months later, the guy she said had it — who the researchers said didn't — got diagnosed too, meaning she can detect Parkinson's even before modern screening tools can." —u/sionnachglic Related: 3."When it hurts to pee. Could be anything, but it's not nothing…" —u/PhucYoCouch "Possibly microbial infections, but yeah — any kind of pain while urinating is a major concern." —u/QueenMePlz 4."Any kind of lump popping up. I felt a small lump under my armpit that I thought was a raised lymph node, but luckily I went to the doctor anyway. It was a very aggressive breast cancer that I detected very early." —u/Electronic_Bass2856 5."Persistent headaches. A family member had headaches that became migraines, then blurry vision, then paralysis on the left side of her body. Brain tumor." —u/Obscurm1 6."When I was 31, I just knew something was wrong. The depression hit out of nowhere, the fatigue was crushing, the weight kept falling off, and the pain was constant. Deep down, I knew it was cancer. But no one listened — not at first. It took eight doctors and nine long, terrifying months before I was finally diagnosed with aggressive stage III colon cancer. By then, it had almost cost me my life. Because it took so long to find, I spent the next four years in a brutally painful fight just to stay alive." —u/johnny_19800 7."Mucus and blood in stool. I saw white stuff — which was mucus — for the very first time and just chalked it up as part of my stool. I didn't even know it was mucus until later on. I assumed the slight bleeding was hemorrhoids, because that's what everyone told me — not to freak out because it will go away on its own. I never had hemorrhoids before and was ignorant enough not to Google it. Well, I started shitting my pants more frequently and had a lot more blood over the next few months. So yeah, it didn't go away on its own, and I felt worse. Anyway, after a colonoscopy, it turns out it's ulcerative colitis — an autoimmune disease that requires medication for life." —u/bio82 Related: 8."Pain in your upper back around your shoulder blades, in your jaw area, and/or neck. A lot of people think heart attacks happen as some wild, painful event. But in actuality, sometimes it's little more than a feeling of pressure, shortness of breath, and/or nausea. This is especially true for women. Never discount these things — especially if you are over 45, even if you are healthy." —u/menellinde 9."For women: very painful and heavy periods — to the point where you cannot function normally." —u/Comfortable-Wafer418 10."If you start peeing all the time and sweating through your sheets regularly, go see a doctor. I wish I'd caught my chronic myelogenous leukemia in time before my spleen grew so huge it cracked open in my abdomen." —u/giggety 11."A stabbing pain in the head. I'm not talking a headache or migraine. I mean it feels like someone is literally stabbing you. In the head. And it doesn't go away no matter what you do. You punch walls because it's so painful. Then the vomiting and confusion start. It was a hemorrhagic stroke. Three brain bleeds. 10 out of 10 do not recommend." —u/addaiya 12."Shortness of breath. They told me it was pregnancy, but it was a symptom of worsening chronic heart failure." —u/Smooth_Storm_9698 Related: 13."Prolonged fatigue or unexplained weight loss." —u/PublicPapaya3218 14."I was tired all the time no matter how much I slept. I'd wake up feeling like I hadn't slept at all, would doze off literally everywhere, and I needed three-hour naps after work. I'd skip workouts (I love lifting weights) and would wake up with cotton mouth, headaches, and chest pains every day for 10 years. Turns out I had the worst sleep apnea my doctor — with 27 years of practice — had ever seen. I was waking up over FIVE HUNDRED times a night. She practically threw a CPAP machine at my face right then and there." "It's almost a year later. I lift weights five or six days a week, and have more energy than anyone I know. I've lost 35 pounds, and I sleep so soundly that I can place a marble on my chest and wake up with it in the same spot in the morning. Blood pressure and LDL cholesterol dropped, and I never have headaches or chest pains anymore. All these years, I kept thinking I was lazy, but I was just exhausted to hell." —u/TesticularPsychosis 15."A couple of years back, I had trouble breathing. I sat up and Googled my symptoms. Google said if you're having trouble breathing, go to your emergency room immediately. I waited four hours for my partner to wake up. He drove me to the ER. I was triaged and immediately sent to resuscitation. Breathing. Never ignore it when you can't do it. It was a full-on asthma attack, but I had never been diagnosed with asthma before. I always thought that how I breathed was how everyone breathed, but looking back, this attack was a long time coming." —u/OzzyGator 16."No one has said dry eyes yet. This affects all ages. The abundance of screen time and TV means we are not blinking enough, causing dry eyes. Dry eyes could lead to astigmatism, myopia, infections, and blurry vision. Kids nowadays are more and more myopic because their iPads cause dry eye, which causes eye strain and leads to glasses wear." —u/Rough_Original2973 17."Your nails suddenly looking weird. Turns out they're a window into your body. Got anemia, low oxygen, liver disease, heart problems? It will show up on your nails. For me, I was in a ton of pain and no one could figure it out because I'm relatively young. But it was awful stomach pain and terrible joint pain with apparently no rhyme or reason. As a side note to this, I noticed some weird tiny holes showing up on my otherwise healthy nails. A specialist, after hearing what I had to say, took my hand, looked at my nails and — without needing the results from bloods he'd just taken — diagnosed me then and there. It turns out I have a severe type of arthritis called PsA. So if your nails suddenly change color, shape, texture, or start getting weird dots or lines you've never seen before, go check it out. It could be nothing, or it could save your life." —u/lolabelle88 18."Extreme thirst." —u/InternetImportant253 Related: 19."Sudden, unexplained anxiety. If you are scared for no reason, there is a reason. Your body is trying to tell you something. I woke up one day at 25 years old and just knew something was wrong. I had no idea what or why — there was no pain or any other indicator — but I knew with every fiber of my being that my life was in danger. After countless tests and dismissals from several doctors, I was finally sent to a neurologist who discovered I had multiple sclerosis. If I hadn't stood up for myself and been insistent, I would not have started the treatments I needed and I would be in a much worse state than I am now." —u/iTsaMe1up 20."If your period returns after complete menopause, it is almost certainly cancer." —u/LadyMacGuffin 21."I knew someone who ignored chronic back pain. Cancer. Died eight months later. Stop pretending you're all Superman. If it hurts, go seek medical attention." —u/espresso_martini__ 22."A small mole — a very tiny small spot — on my foot turned out to be melanoma in situ. I'm not light-skinned, so the chances of melanoma for me were very unlikely. My doctors were surprised that I found it and asked for a biopsy." —u/SlipWest7162 23."A persistent dry cough." —u/Emotional_Snow_1375 "Yep. My friend in elementary school had a cough all year. Fifth grade rolls around and they found out he had cancer. By the middle of sixth grade, he was gone. I'm 30 and I still think about him." —u/MortalJazz Have you ever experienced a symptom that you initially ignored but later realized was significant? Maybe you've had that nagging feeling that something wasn't right, even when everything seemed normal on the surface? Share your experiences in the comments — your story might help someone else recognize an important warning sign in their own body. These are personal experiences shared by individuals, not professional medical advice. Symptoms can have many different causes, and everyone's health situation is unique. If you're experiencing concerning symptoms, please consult with your doctor or seek appropriate medical care. This content is meant to encourage awareness and self-advocacy, not replace professional medical guidance. 24. Note: Responses have been edited for length/clarity. Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds:

'A slap in the face': Georgia and Arkansas' Medicaid work rules may preview the road ahead
'A slap in the face': Georgia and Arkansas' Medicaid work rules may preview the road ahead

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'A slap in the face': Georgia and Arkansas' Medicaid work rules may preview the road ahead

President Donald Trump is expected Friday to sign into law his sprawling domestic policy bill, which includes nearly $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid, the government health insurance program for low-income and disabled Americans. Dubbed the 'big, beautiful bill,' the new legislation will extend Trump's 2017 tax cuts and make up for them in part by slashing federal Medicaid funding, introducing copays for some services and — for the first time — implementing nationwide Medicaid work requirements. The final version of the bill didn't include an estimate of coverage losses; an earlier Congressional Budget Office report projected that about 11 million people could lose their health coverage and become uninsured by 2034 because of the program cuts. Medicaid is jointly funded by the federal government and the states, which usually mandate that applicants meet certain criteria, such as low income, disability or caregiving status. Only two states have implemented Medicaid work requirements: Arkansas in 2018 and Georgia in 2023. Georgia's program, called Pathways to Coverage, remains in effect. Over the 10 months Arkansas' work requirement was in place, more than 18,000 people in the state lost Medicaid coverage. Georgia hasn't done a good job keeping track of how many have lost coverage, but enrollment remains low, said Leighton Ku, director of the Center for Health Policy Research at the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University. When people lose Medicaid coverage, they view it as 'sort of a slap in the face,' Ku said. 'When your income is down, when you're unemployed, that's when you lose everything,' he said. 'When you're most in need. That's when you lose your food assistance, that's when you lose your health insurance coverage.' Kendall Rogers, 40, of Stone Mountain, Georgia, is looking for a job after he lost his Medicaid coverage this year because of the state's work requirements, according to his mom, Trudy Rogers, 59. The change means Trudy now has to take care of herself for long parts of the day. She has fibromyalgia and nerve problems in her back that make it difficult for her to get around. Kendall was caring for her nearly full time, Trudy said, but Georgia's work requirements don't offer exemptions for caregivers for older adults. She called the new requirements 'an insult not only to him, but to me.' 'Because now he's forced to go out and look for work, and I need him to stay around the house,' she said. To justify the cuts, Republicans have argued that they're not taking Medicaid from those who are rightfully entitled to it — such as, they say, single mothers or the disabled — but from 'young, able-bodied men' who they say are abusing the system. 'If you clean that up and shore it up, you save a lot of money, and you return the dignity of work to young men who need to be out working instead of playing video games all day,' House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said in April. But as seen in Georgia and Arkansas, that's not who is largely affected. Cynthia Gibson, director of the Georgia Legal Services Program's Health Law Unit, which helps appeal Medicaid denials, said many people in the state lose coverage not because they aren't working, but because they aren't aware of the new rules or face administrative issues like missed paperwork or not having received notices. Others, like Kendall Rogers, are caring for family members but don't qualify for exemptions. Likewise, in Arkansas, only 3% or 4% of the people on Medicaid in 2018 weren't working and didn't qualify for the exemptions under the state program, said Dr. Benjamin Sommers, a physician and health economist at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Sommers published a study in the New England Journal of Medicine in 2019 looking at the impact of Arkansas' work requirements. His research found that about 40% of the other roughly 96% of people on Medicaid in the state were working the required 80 hours a month under the state program. The rest either had medical conditions that prevented them from working or had other responsibilities, such as school or caring for family members. Implementing work requirements also didn't result in a higher employment rate — one of the arguments Arkansas officials used in favor of the new work rules. 'Most people, almost everybody, was already doing what [the state] wanted them to do,' he said. Very few were 'the proverbial on the couch, video game story that we're hearing from some of the supporters.' Most commonly, Gibson said, people aren't actually aware that they've lost coverage until they go see their doctors. 'And that creates kind of a panic,' she said. 'Sometimes they may have something really important scheduled that the doctors won't do when they run their insurance and find out they no longer have coverage.' Gibson said the people most often affected by the work requirement are those in noncorporate jobs, including independent workers — like Uber drivers or delivery workers — who don't receive regular pay stubs and can't meet Georgia's work verification requirements. Others include people with certain disabilities that don't qualify for exemptions, as well as caregivers for children or elderly relatives. People who lose coverage often avoid going to the doctor or getting medical care unless it's an emergency, because they don't want to accumulate debt, she said. 'They just don't get treatment; they don't go to the doctor,' she said. Heather Payne, 53, of Dalton, Georgia, couldn't avoid medical care after she had a series of debilitating strokes in 2022. Unable to work, she was told she didn't qualify for an Affordable Care Act plan and didn't qualify for Georgia's Medicaid program because she was a childless adult. She later enrolled in classes to become a nurse practitioner — a career she could pursue despite her disability. By that point, the state's work requirement had gone into effect. However, Payne was told she still didn't qualify for Medicaid because she wasn't taking enough credit hours. She couldn't afford to take more. To pay for her medical bills, she burned through her $40,000 in savings and is now in collections for tens of thousands of dollars. 'When you have a problem, there's no help for you,' she said. 'It makes you feel as though society doesn't care what happens to you.' Dimitris Terrell, 49, of Clarkston, also worries her 24-year-old son, Justin Anderson, could start to accumulate debt following changes to Georgia's Medicaid program. Anderson doesn't work, but he has Medicaid coverage because he has Crohn's disease, a bowel disease that can cause chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. Terrell said her son started having to pay large copays last year, after the state began charging copays for prescription drugs and certain services. Anderson has paid over $400 out of pocket on doctor's visits and hundreds of dollars for the dentist, neither of which he could afford, his mother said. She also worries about his losing coverage — either because he would no longer qualify or because of missed paperwork. 'He's pretty sad and shocked,' Terrell said. 'He said, 'Like, Mama, I don't understand why I have to pay.'' This article was originally published on

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