No one has gotten it yet, so a hint - these are reported as percentages
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The winner here - most of the percentages in the follow-up columns cannot possibly be true, given the sample size. Either the authors had dropouts that they didn't mention, or something else went wrong!https://twitter.com/undafiend/status/1435466075550924802?s=20 …
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That’s certainly an interesting way to report p values
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Are there any true numbers? Why do most numbers end in 0 or 5?
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They are percentages so that's not suspicious at all! Try again

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For Ivermectin when the results went in the wrong direction the results are insignificant, and when there was no difference they are significant?
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The p-values are definitely incorrect, but you can't actually know that just from this table because you don't know what tests they've performed
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First timeframe percentages > overall for some rows? The table title makes my head hurt

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So maybe I get the table now. Baseline and post baseline for each treatment. Pvalue for the comparison of baseline to post baseline within a treatment group
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If I've understood the table correctly, the percentages reported don't match up with a whole number when relating it back to the number of participants in that group. As for which are true values, I can't say. Maybe none?
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