Theseus said:
It may not tell you that the thing works but it does tell you something. As you say, you do not know whether it was the bracelet, the placebo effect, etc.
No, it tells you
nothing. You left out the most important alternative when quoting the text (now there's some confirmation bias right there): That it was nothing at all, that she may have just started feeling better randomly. This happens all the time. You can't say what happened in a
single event, because our knowledge of the world is flawed and imperfect. You don't know, and never will know, all the relevant circumstances there. Or to put it another way: You have 'signal' (causal relationships to things
we deem significant) and 'noise' ('random' events). You simply
can't tell if a single data point is 'signal' or 'noise' if that's all you've got. A single event does not establish a pattern. This is statistics; hard, mathematical fact.
On the other hand we have well-known psychological fact: Our brains are good pattern-finders. They're hard-wired to do it. But this mechanism often fails and leads us to find patterns where there aren't any. We see 'faces' in rocks. We very consistently fail to recognize random behavior. (and conversely, don't succeed very well at producing truly 'random' strings of digits, for instance). And this leads to mis-attributing the causes of events. Add to that our propensity for confirmation bias and you have billions of people walking around with thousands of weird superstitions that simply never had any basis in reality to begin with.
There are, apparently, questionnaires and profiles available to assist in assessing pain. Now this may not be very "scientific" but on the other hand, a study purporting to evaluate a product for pain relief that discounts any and all "testimony" is skirting the big issue.
That's a straw-man argument. There's a
huge difference between an individual testifying his personal experiences of a single event, and a controlled scientific study that's based on a large group of individuals reporting their experiences.
One person giving testimony on behalf of a product says nothing. Neither does 100 individuals doing the same. Because what are they comparing to? (nothing, as I already explained) What are you comparing to? What about the people who didn't experience a positive effect, and thus weren't included in the marketing? You have no basis for comparison either. Not to mention ruling out other factors.
A proper scientific study would, for instance, do something such as take three large groups suffering from the same ailments. Give one group your magnetic bracelets, another group identical bracelets that weren't magnetic (placebo), and a third group no bracelets at all (control), and then compare their reported results after some time. (The ones wearing bracelets would naturally all be told that
they were wearing the magnetic ones.)
A scientific study that ignores results is like a court system that ignores justice. Assign an advocate to each side and he who plays the best hand wins, truth or justice be damned.
You should really learn more about the scientific method and how science works, and
why it works before you go around making statements about how
you think it should work. Science does
not ignore evidence. Especially not evidence of things that go against our existing theories. In fact, evidence that goes against our existing theories are
especially interesting. How else would we improve our knowledge?
Science ignores 'evidence' when it's not actually evidence of anything. Nor does science go out of its way to study possible relationships where we don't have any particular reason to believe there is one. There's no conceivable mechanism for how rubbing a cat against my head would cure toothache, so nobody's going to bother to do a study to find out if such a phenomenon exists. That's not being 'closed-minded'. It's being economical with your time and efforts.