This link has been bookmarked by 420 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Feb 2010, by someone privately.
-
18 May 12
-
30 Apr 12
-
22 Apr 12
-
14 Apr 12
-
08 Apr 12
-
15 Mar 12
-
24 Feb 12
-
02 Feb 12
-
27 Jan 12
-
18 Jan 12
-
09 Jan 12
-
04 Jan 12
-
02 Jan 12
-
13 Dec 11
Simon Lorimervisualization of efficiencies of treatments
health visualization science supplements food infographics nutrition data
-
04 Dec 11
Alan NewmanA brilliant and highly detailed infographic on health supplements.
-
01 Dec 11
-
28 Nov 11
-
22 Nov 11
-
15 Nov 11
John Burkvery cool visualization about the scientific evidence for various heath supplements.
-
13 Nov 11
-
10 Nov 11
-
06 Nov 11
-
31 Oct 11
-
22 Oct 11
-
17 Oct 11
-
08 Oct 11
-
28 Sep 11
-
27 Sep 11
-
08 Sep 11
-
01 Sep 11
Peter CruickshankThis image is a “balloon race”. The higher a bubble, the greater the evidence for its effectiveness. But the supplements are only effective for the conditions listed inside the bubble.
You might also see multiple bubbles for certain supps. These is becau -
30 Aug 11
-
28 Aug 11
-
13 Aug 11
-
09 Aug 11
-
08 Aug 11
-
03 Aug 11
michelle mcshortallgreat infographic on tangible benefits of supplements - each bubble backed up by scientific study abstract - very sobering for those who are tempted to buy these supplements!
-
28 Jul 11
-
27 Jul 11
Greg SantosSnake Oil? The scientific evidence for health supplements - #infographic http://dunn.it/nAkDKz
-
15 Jul 11
-
08 Jul 11
-
02 Jul 11
Sharon ElinVisualized information about popular health supplements... Scroll down for the "worth it" line.
-
25 Jun 11
-
24 Jun 11
-
17 Jun 11
-
08 Jun 11
-
31 May 11
-
30 May 11
-
26 May 11
-
Roberta McBurney"
see a still image version | find out more about this image | post a comment
UPDATE 3 – 9th May 2011 -Complete refresh of the evidence. New spreadsheet of data
UPDATE 2 – 1st October 2010 -Top to bottom revise of the data. See the change log for details.
UPDATE 1 – 21st March 2010 - We’ve updated our data thanks to excellent visitor feedback and new evidence. See the change log for details.
This image is a “balloon race”. The higher a bubble, the greater the evidence for its effectiveness. But the supplements are only effective for the conditions listed inside the bubble.
You might also see multiple bubbles for certain supps. These is because some supps affect a range of conditions, but the evidence quality varies from condition to condition. For example, there’s strong evidence that Green Tea is good for cholesterol levels. But evidence for its anti-cancer effects is conflicting. In these cases, we give a supp another bubble.
This visualisation generates itself from this Google Doc. So when new research comes out, we can quickly update the data and regenerate the image. (How cool is that??)
As ever, we welcome your thoughts, crits, comments, corrections, compliments, tweaks, new evidence, missing supps, and general feedback. Thank you! post a comment
source: PubMed, Cochrane,
data: in this Google spreadsheet
research: Miriam Quick, David McCandless, Pearl Doughty-White, Alexia Wdowski
code: Andy Perkins
Like this? Subscribe for more Web Feed Twitter FB
Share this:
Share
" -
23 May 11
Shunt 82Information is Beautiful has updated their interactive visualisation of the effectiveness of various health supplements, based on scientific research.
healthcare health counterknowledge deception_dishonesty science bulletin infographic
-
22 May 11
Roland Gesthuizen"Scientific evidence for popular health supplements showing tangible human health benefits when taken orally by an adult with a healthy diet."
health visualization science supplements nutrition mediation drugs food Interactive
-
19 May 11
-
18 May 11
-
17 May 11
-
16 May 11
-
14 May 11
-
13 May 11
-
12 May 11
-
11 May 11
-
This image is a “balloon race”. The higher a bubble, the greater the evidence for its effectiveness. But the supplements are only effective for the conditions listed inside the bubble.
You might also see multiple bubbles for certain supps. These is because some supps affect a range of conditions, but the evidence quality varies from condition to condition. For example, there’s strong evidence that Green Tea is good for cholesterol levels. But evidence for its anti-cancer effects is conflicting. In these cases, we give a supp another bubble.
-
-
16 Apr 11
-
14 Apr 11
-
17 Mar 11
-
16 Mar 11
-
25 Feb 11
-
24 Feb 11
-
23 Feb 11
-
Bob GourleyFabulous visualization of scientific evidence (or lack) for popular health supplements http://bit.ly/gPrDdC Be sure to click on the bubbles
-
22 Feb 11
-
13 Feb 11
-
12 Feb 11
-
07 Feb 11
-
28 Jan 11
-
19 Jan 11
-
29 Dec 10
-
15 Dec 10
-
13 Dec 10
-
30 Nov 10
-
29 Nov 10
-
18 Nov 10
-
Frank MozerBeautiful lay out with some really important data collected.
-
13 Nov 10
-
11 Nov 10
Page Comments
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.