I find studies like this to be such a headache On the one hand, I think the research is valid and important On the other, this headline is SUPER misleading and there are massive caveats not explored in the articlehttps://twitter.com/CNN/status/1295777514976153600 …
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Now, the statistical significance disappears in one of the models there, and I'm not saying that it's likely that Latino physicians are killing babies, but it underscores the difficulty of these analyses Causal attribution is NOT EASY
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For one thing, the analysis didn't adjust for a few confounders that could be important: - maternal age - paternal factors - BMI/blood sugar/blood pressure (they did adjust for ICD-10 codes but these are pretty blunt)
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Now all of this is not to say that this study isn't worthwhile, important, and should prompt further research But I think it's worth noting that the CNN headline at the start of this thread that went mega-viral is misleading at best
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If NOTHING ELSE, this could read "0.3% more likely to die"pic.twitter.com/s8VnrO4Ipq
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Anyway, the point here is not to bash the study, but to point out that you should be skeptical of everything ESPECIALLY if it agrees with you because that's where you're most blind
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End of conversation
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