Newsweek took on Oprah this past week with a cover story calling out her promotion of some of her guests’ health claims, which are usually not based upon scientifically sound principles. It’s hard to take on a powerhouse media deity like Oprah, because of her positive influence in so many people’s lives. It’s harder to stand fast with your criticism, and yet Newsweek appears to be doing just that.
From actress Suzanne Somers’ use of “bioidentical” hormones to combat aging to Jenny McCarthy, the Playboy model and actress, who promotes the completely discredited theory that childhood vaccines may cause autism, Oprah’s been there making sure these poor stars get a spotlight on their causes. Would Oprah give the same airtime to a random doctor promoting the use of cognitive-behavioral therapy to help prevent teen suicides (as a recent study just found)? I seriously doubt it. Cognitive-behavioral therapy is neither sexy nor provocative. Hollywood stars who claim they are being silenced by large pharmaceutical companies are far more in vogue and bound to get more ratings.
What about the need for science to enter into this discussion? Sorry, Oprah’s not there to give you a balanced discussion about the science. Oprah is, after all, an entertainment talk show, not a documentary on the Discovery Channel. Oprah says, “I believe my viewers understand the medical information presented on the show is just that — information — not an endorsement or prescription. Rather, my intention is for our viewers to take the information and engage in a dialogue with their medical practitioners about what may be right for them.”
Yet that sort of statement isn’t very intellectually honest. If you sit next to Jenny McCarthy on stage next to Oprah, all the while having the real medical experts, scientists and doctors in the audience, waiting to be called upon (like students in class), well, you see the power differentiation carefully orchestrated by Oprah and her producers. This isn’t some sort of production mistake — this is Oprah completely understanding how her influence works, and using that power to persuade in a very specific and targeted manner, implying “I’m sitting next to the real expert who has the ‘untold story.’ This is who you should pay attention to.”
Oprah has an incredible power to persuade through her influence. She can make or break a book author by recommending his or her book on the show. The same with a product. And now, by examining sometimes ludicrous medical claims and giving them the illusion of legitimacy, she clouds the picture. Not because we have any new scientific data, but because she has used the power of the media and her personality to simply change the conversation from one dealing with data, to one dealing with unsubstantiated “cover-ups” and Hollywood personalities. Look at these poor (yet very rich!) Hollywood stars who can’t get their story heard!
Perhaps it never occurred to Oprah that the reason nobody is paying much attention to the likes of Somers or McCarthy is because their story is a bunch of malarkey based upon anecdotes and stories. And while such stories can be very powerful to tell a personal experience that may help change someone else’s life through the telling, it’s when she or her guests move from simply relating a personal story to making specific medical and health recommendations that is causing many professionals to do a double-take:
She didn’t make it clear on the show what form of the disease she had, or what her doctors believed brought it on. She shared with her audience that she took thyroid medication and spent a month relaxing in Hawaii, where she ate fresh foods and drank soy milk. Northrup advises that in addition to conventional thyroid medication, women should consider taking iodine supplements.
That is just what they shouldn’t do, says Dr. David Cooper, a professor of endocrinology at Johns Hopkins medical school who specializes in thyroid disease. “She is mixing truth with fantasy here,” he says. First, “thyroid disease has nothing to do with women being downtrodden. She makes it sound like these women brought it on themselves.” Cooper agrees that thyroid patients should seek thyroid hormone treatment to bring the symptoms under control. But, he says, Oprah should have stayed clear of soy milk. “If you’re hypothyroid and you’re taking thyroid medication, you do not want to be taking soy. It will block your body’s ability to absorb the medication.”
Iodine, he says, can be even riskier. “[Northrop] says iodine deficiency is more common in women, when in reality it’s not very common in women at all. This is a myth.” The thyroid gland, he says, is extremely sensitive to iodine. “If you have mild hypothyroidism, taking iodine will make it worse.”
Of course, nobody watching the show had this important information and may have started doing something seemingly innocuous — such as drinking soy milk — that may have completely wreaked havoc on their condition.
But don’t take my word for it. Check out the views from around the ‘net about the story, summarized in the below blog entry from Newsweek. Sadly, Newsweek chose not to link to those that were critical of Newsweek’s coverage of this story. Here, for example is Suzanne Somers’ response. Somers rightfully points out that she just acts as a mouthpiece to the many doctors she has spoken with and interviewed on the topic of bioidentical hormones.
A very interesting controversy. It would be even more interesting to see Oprah address this controversy directly on a future show, inviting the Newsweek authors and some of the science bloggers on to discuss how this sort of media promotion can ultimately be a great disservice to her loyal viewers.
Read the reaction blog entry from Newsweek: Hey, Did You Hear We Took on Oprah? The Blog-o-sphere Reacts