Comment Re:Computation (Score 2, Interesting) 78
In the 60's I was a programmer/statistician with no medical background for a large group of physicians engaged in clinical trials of cancer chemotherapy. I created a simulation model of the human blood system that was able to predict the future toxic effects of the chemotherapy after only a few doses.
The doctors rejected it because I was not a doctor. My theory was confirmed 15 years later by others. My boss (the chief of surgery) had suggested I should go to Med School. The chief of Hematology liked my work, but only because it explained the findings in his own paper published in the Annals of Hematology 15 years before. At that time a physics student who had been blasted with cobalt 60 pellets had been brought to the hospital and as a young intern he had the good sense to run every test possible for 90 days straight. My model predicted exactly what he had seen. Even when the radiation source was removed the blood values continued to oscillate up and down on their own as the body responded according to my model.
The chemotherapists were erring in not accounting for the body's built-in response mechanisms, and they didn't want to hear it from me.