"Why Doctors Hate Science", published in
Newsweek in 2009, prompted many critical responses.
David Gorski, writing under his pen name "Orac", took issue with Begley's characterization of medical practitioners as ignoring basic medical science. One example used by Begley was that of women continuing to receive
pap tests after having had total
hysterectomies. This prompted a fresh wave of criticism, such as that expressed by Leslie Becker-Phelps in
Psychology Today when she referred to Begley's article as "alarmingly misleading". Becker-Phelps stressed the intense educational requirements of the field and stated that, "the
APA mandates that its member psychologists
use their scientific knowledge in their clinical judgments." it raised criticisms from science writers and
skeptics. Skeptical blogger and science writer
PZ Myers said of "Placebo Power", "She's got a tendency to go charging off into fluff and that's what's happened here." Myers' objection largely rested on Begley's reliance on
anecdotal evidence to bolster claims of the efficacy of placebo treatments. Other articles by Begley have attracted criticism from the political arena. The cover of the August 13, 2007, issue of
Newsweek bore the large-print words: "Global Warming is a Hoax*", with the asterisk pointing to the smaller-print words: "*or so claim well-funded naysayers who still reject the overwhelming evidence of climate change." Anthropogenic
climate change denier Marc Morano, former communications director for
Oklahoma Senator Jim Inhofe, referred to the article as a "one-sided editorial, masquerading as a 'news article.'" Criticism of the August 13, 2007, article also came from fellow
Newsweek columnist
Robert Samuelson. In a column that appeared in the next issue, Samuelson characterized the article as "'fundamentally misleading' because it focused on the 'peripheral' actions of the 'denial machine' instead of the intractability of man-made warming". ==Awards==