Here they are, highlighted. I should also mention that most of these were ~barely~ significantpic.twitter.com/AhFNUDyxbZ
Epidemiologist. Writer (Guardian, Observer etc). "Well known research trouble-maker". PhDing at @UoW Host of @senscipod Email gidmk.healthnerd@gmail.com he/him
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Here they are, highlighted. I should also mention that most of these were ~barely~ significantpic.twitter.com/AhFNUDyxbZ
Let's zoom in on one number that is in EVERY GODDAM ARTICLE The "1.5 times higher risk of breast cancer and twofold higher risk of prostate cancer" Total. Utter. Nonsense.pic.twitter.com/qH8WOonrFz
To do this, we have to quickly go over confidence intervals
When we compute a confidence interval, we are basically saying that there's a decent chance that the true value lies between 2 points
If the confidence interval crosses 1, it means that there's no statistical difference between the result and what we'd expect to find purely by chance If the confidence interval is very wide, it means that there is so much variance in the result that it might not be true anyway
These are the tests behind that headline. Confidence intervals are in the little red squares Notice anything strange?pic.twitter.com/HU0a4dOFAE
The first one is 1.00-2.17 That is ~technically~ significant, but really only just. This is likely to be a meaningless result
The second is 1.38-3.03. This is a more robust result, but it's still bordering on insignificance given the sample size
So the headline finding, the one that is being used to scare everyone about how terrifying light is... ...probably isn't true And it gets worse
This is the conclusion. It's the closest you can get to saying "we found nothing at all" without actually coming out and saying itpic.twitter.com/sRD9NO3Pgb
Note to journalists: when a scientists hedges this much in a conclusion, there's a good chance the findings were not significant at allpic.twitter.com/Uahhl1pLvS
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