See, the thing is, that top study appears to be contributing the ENTIRE association. Every other study found no result at all, but one single study has caused the entire relationship to become statistically significantpic.twitter.com/pcW30Bzkhm
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And the press release, let's remember, is astonishingly positive. No mention of the MASSIVE question mark remaining after this research, just "pet owners more likely to have IBS"
The real finding from this analysis is that there may be a very modest increase in risk of IBS from owning a pet, but this seems unlikely at present based on the totality of the evidence
Who do we blame for the misreporting? I'll leave that to you There are many steps along the way that could've corrected this, but none were taken
SMALL CORRECTION The forest plot I included earlier in the analysis of the random-effects model was from the log-transformed variables (oops) here's the plot once exponentiated:pic.twitter.com/Me4zJfoI6w
Also, the p-value is 0.064 for this model, which is technically not significant. The effect size is also different from that reported in the abstract, however if I run a fixed effects model everything is exactly the same so I suspect that's what was actually done here
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