I identified one example of this in the thread, but it's pretty much ubiquitous throughout the analysis
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Replying to @GidMK @K_Sheldrick
Can you name the author in the example of cherry-picking? I don't see it. Which study was misplaced in the inclusion-exclusion criteria?
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Replying to @EduEngineer @K_Sheldrick
It's not the inclusion criteria, which are basically "chuck all the awful studies into one website". It's just that the authors extract only "positive" results regardless of whether studies actually showed a benefit
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Replying to @GidMK @K_Sheldrick
You keep conflating "didn't show a benefit" with "wasn't statistically significant", but the latter doesn't make a difference in a binary p-value computation.
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And your idea of "number wasn't corrected properly" means "awful study" is probably only slightly correlating in reality. I've read a 5-digit number of studies, and I find such mistakes in the majority of them, at every level of clinical quality.
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Replying to @EduEngineer @K_Sheldrick
Yes as I said there are a lot of awful studies. This one is particularly worthless tho, for a number of reasons not limited to the one that you want to ignore for some reason
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Replying to @GidMK @K_Sheldrick
I'm not ignoring it. I stated that it was worth contacting the author and figuring it out, but before that step, it's not a reason to suggest "worthless".
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Replying to @EduEngineer @K_Sheldrick
That's one element of quality. It's not even the only thing that I pointed out in this thread. Other issues are the lack of reporting of potential confounders, the inadequate control group, the lack of reporting generally, the contradictions btwn pre-reg and study...
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... the lack of information about ethics approval, the minimal information about how control participants were selected, the minimal information about the patients etc etc etc
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Replying to @GidMK @K_Sheldrick
"the lack of information about ethics approval" I think this is the moment where you've totally jumped the shark. Ethics approval is as close to meaningless as possible when testing a medicine with a long safety profile. Maybe less meaningful than requiring it of your trashman.
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Sorry are you saying that you have no issues with research conducted without ethical approval? At the very least, it is illegal in many places
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