So, everyone has been talking about this 776 figure and how bad it is
I wanted to figure out some point of reference as to how bad it might actually be #notmydebt #Robodebt 1/https://twitter.com/GidMK/status/1097059649075978241 …
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This means that the rate of death for people aged 45 or below as a proportion of the total sample is 776/410000 = 0.002 = 0.2% But what does that MEAN? 3/
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It's important to remember that this rate of death was over 2 years. So we halve that for the yearly rate: 0.2/2 = 0.1% 3.5/
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(Note: This isn't the best statistic, but because we don't have the age breakdown of debt recipients we can't get the exact rate of death for 45 and below) 4/
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If we look at the last 10 years (2008-2018), we see that the average number of deaths in Australia in this age group was 6,607 The population >15 years was ~19.5 million 5/
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Plugging those numbers in we get 6607/19500000 = 0.0007 = 0.07% So the VERY CRUDE rate of death in the sample of robodebt recipients was about 0.1/0.07 = 40% higher than the national average 6/
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(This is what's known as a relative risk, which means the risk of one thing happening compared to another) 6.5/
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What does this mean? Well, not that much. As I said, this is very crude. We know that the debt notices were probably sent to less healthy than average people (some of them were disability recipients, for example) 7/
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So the fact that the relative risk of death was about 40% higher in the robodebt recipients may not mean anything at all (although it's worth noting that we HAVE - mostly - controlled for age by definition here) 8/
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Ultimately, you'd need to do a much more robust analysis to get a particularly strong answer What we CAN say is that ROBODEBT DEFINITELY DIDN'T CAUSE 776 DEATHS
#notmydebt#robodebt 9/Show this thread -
People who received debt notices *may* be at a higher risk of death than the general population - it's hard to be sure - but the debt notices definitely didn't kill people en masse End 10/
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Worth noting - because it's my eternal bug-bear - that the ABSOLUTE risk of death appears to have been increased by 0.03% by debt notices, which is somewhat less impressive and scary as well
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CORRECTION TO THIS THREAD - I actually miscalculated the relative and absolute risk - I halved the estimate twice accidentally This is why peer review is important thank you
@AndrewHayenShow this thread -
The true relative risk is 3, or a 300% increased risk of death, and the absolute risk should be 0.07 or an 0.07% increased risk of death
@not_my_debtShow this thread -
But still probably worth remembering that this is not very meaningful and we'd have to at the very minimum compare to other Centrelink recipients - not the general population like I did - to get a decent estimate
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End of conversation
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