August
10, 2005
Walter
Williams
http://www.NewsAndOpinion.com | We're not omniscient.
That means making errors is unavoidable. Understanding the nature of errors is
vital to our well-being. Let's look at it.
There are two types of errors,
nicely named the type I error and the type II error. The type I error is when
we reject a true hypothesis when we should accept it. The type II error is when
we accept a false hypothesis when we should reject it. In decision-making,
there's always a non-zero probability of making one error or the other. That
means we're confronted with asking the question: Which error is least costly?
Let's apply this concept to a couple of issues.
The stated reason for going to war
with Iraq is that our intelligence agencies surmised Saddam Hussein had, or was
near having, nuclear, biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction.
Intelligence is never perfect. During World War II, our intelligence agencies
thought that Germany was close to having an atomic bomb. That intelligence was
later found to be flawed, but it played an important role in the conduct of the
war.
Since intelligence is always less
than perfect, we're forced to decide which error is least costly. Leading up to
our war with Iraq, the potential errors confronting us were: Saddam Hussein had
weapons of mass destruction and we incorrectly assumed he didn't. Or, he didn't
have weapons of mass destruction and we incorrectly assumed he did. Both errors
are costly, but which is more costly? It's my guess that it would have been
more costly for us to make the first error: Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass
destruction and we incorrectly assumed he didn't.
Another example of type I and type
II errors hits closer to home. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials, in
their drug approval process, can essentially make two errors. They can approve
a drug that has unanticipated dangerous side effects (type II). Or, they can
disapprove, or hold up approval of, a drug that's perfectly safe and effective
(type I). In other words, they can err on the side of under-caution or err on
the side of over-caution. Which error do FDA officials have the greater
incentive to make?
If a FDA official errs by
approving a drug that has unanticipated, dangerous side effects, he risks
congressional hearings, disgrace and termination. Erring on the side of
under-caution produces visible, sick victims who are represented by counsel and
whose plight is hyped by the media.
Erring on the side of over-caution
is another matter. A classic example was beta-blockers, which an American Heart
Association study said will "lengthen the lives of people at risk of
sudden death due to irregular heartbeats." The beta-blockers in question
were available in Europe in 1967, yet the FDA didn't approve them for use in
the U.S. until 1976. In 1979, Dr. William Wardell, a professor of pharmacology,
toxicology and medicine at the University of Rochester, estimated that a single
beta-blocker, alprenolol, which had already been sold for three years in
Europe, but not approved for use in the U.S., could have saved more than 10,000
lives a year.
The type I error, erring on the
side of over-caution, has little or no cost to FDA officials. Grieving
survivors of those 10,000 people who unnecessarily died each year don't know
why their loved one died, and surely they don't connect the death to FDA
over-caution. For FDA officials, these are the best kind of victims — invisible
ones.
When an FDA official holds a press
conference to announce its approval of a new life-saving drug, I'd like to see
just one reporter ask: How many lives would have been saved had the FDA not
delayed the drug's approval?
The bottom line is, we humans are
not perfect. We will make errors. Rationality requires that we recognize and
weigh the cost of one error against the other.