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  1. Dec 20, 2014 · The researchers who took it upon themselves to fact-check Dr. Oz and his on-air guests were able to find legitimate studies related to another 11% of the recommendations made on the show.

    • karen.kaplan@latimes.com
    • Staff Writer
  2. Dec 17, 2014 · According to the analysis, Dr. Oz offers an average of 12 recommendations per show. The authors' findings, and to the BMJ’s credit, the ensuing BMJ discussion, point out what glass houses we all live in. This is especially so as we shift focus from disease suppression to health creation.

  3. Nov 7, 2022 · In a largely incoherent speech just weeks after COVID-19 started spreading widely in the US, Dr. Oz insinuated that hydroxychloroquine could treat people who had become very ill with the...

    • Maggie O'neill
  4. Dec 20, 2023 · There’s no cure for diabetes. The Facebook ads claiming to show Dr. Oz promoting a cure are actually deepfake videos that have been manipulated to spread false information, according to our sources.

  5. Oct 11, 2024 · Overall, we rate Dr. Oz and DoctorOz.com as quackery-level pseudoscience. While many of the products that Oz promotes are safe and harmless, there are others that are misleading or downright dangerous.

  6. Dec 27, 2021 · A 2014 study in The BMJ analyzed the claims made on 40 randomly selected episodes of “The Dr. Oz Show,” and found that scientific evidence supported just 46% of his claims, contradicted 15%...

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  8. Dec 19, 2014 · Reporting in the BMJ, Canadian researchers analyzed two medical TV talk shows—The Dr. Oz Show and The Doctors—and found that only 46% of the recommendations on The Dr. Oz Show and 63% on...

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