Health Nerd Profile picture
Sep 21, 2020 15 tweets 4 min read Read on X
A study recently made massive, international news for reportedly showing that normal glasses may protect against COVID-19

Let's do a brief peer-review on twitter, because this is wild 1/n
2/n The study is here. Altmetric of >2,000, hundreds of news articles about it already

jamanetwork.com/journals/jamao…
3/n The basic idea of the study is simple - we know that COVID-19 can be spread through droplets. Sometimes these droplets might go into eyes. Wearing glasses might prevent this, so do people who wear regular corrective glasses get COVID-19 less than people who don't?
4/n Now, usually what you'd do here is identify one group of people with glasses, one without, and follow them up through time to see if the infection rates were different

This is what's known as a cohort study
5/n Another way of doing this research would be to look at people who have caught COVID-19, and another group who haven't, and compare them in terms of the proportion who wear glasses

This is called a case-control study, and is what these researchers appear to have done
6/n Essentially, the cases (COVID-19 patients) wore glasses less than controls (non-COVID-19 patients), which might indicate that glasses prevented COVID-19 infection

So far so good, right?
7/n Well, there are a few immediate and obvious snags

Snag 1: small sample size. We have <300 cases and no information on controls. That's weird, and problematic (usually these studies are much bigger)
8/n Snag 2: The outcome measure isn't wearing glasses. The study actually appears to compare short-sightedness percentages between the cases and controls, which is an obviously imperfect measure
9/n (It's imperfect because not everyone who wears glasses is myopic and not everyone who is myopic wears glasses >8hrs per day)
10/n But then we hit the biggest snag of all

The control population

You see, the authors didn't actually collect a control sample. The rate of myopia here is from ANOTHER STUDY ENTIRELY
11/n Not only that, but the study was conducted IN 1987 and the extrapolation is just weirdly moved forward from then

This makes NO SENSE AT ALL
12/n I honestly don't know what to say here. They're comparing the rate of myopia in a group of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 to the research findings of physical fitness of students from 1987

You can't draw any meaning from that!
13/n These two groups are so wildly different that it's entirely impossible to say whether the glasses had the slightest impact on anything at all, it's just very strange speculation
14/n Maybe glasses DO prevent COVID-19 transmission, but based on this research we have absolutely no idea if that's true
15/n The ABSOLUTE BEST you can say from this research is that it appears that fewer patients diagnosed with COVID-19 from a single hospital in Hubei had myopia than some high-school students in '87

It's not even about glasses!

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Health Nerd

Health Nerd Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @GidMK

Mar 4
The final large published trial on ivermectin for COVID-19, PRINCIPLE, is now out. Main findings:

1. Clinically unimportant (~1-2day reduction) in time to resolution of symptoms.
2. No benefit for hospitalization/death. Image
Now, you may be asking "why does anyone care at all any more about ivermectin for COVID?" to which I would respond "yes"

We already knew pretty much everything this study shows. That being said, always good to have more data!
The study is here:

For me, the main finding is pretty simple - ivermectin didn't impact the likelihood of people going to hospital or dying from COVID-19. This has now been shown in every high-quality study out there.pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38431155/
Read 8 tweets
Feb 20
Fascinating study.

What's particularly interesting is a finding that the authors don't really discuss in their conclusion. These results appear to show that gender affirming care is associated with a reduction in suicide risk 1/n
2/n The paper is a retrospective cohort study that compares young adults and some teens who were referred for gender related services in Finland with a cohort that was matched using age and sex. The median age in the study was 19, so the majority of the population are adults. Image
3/n The study is very limited. The authors had access to the Finnish registries which include a wide range of data, but chose to only correct their cohorts for age, sex, and number of psychiatric appointments prior to their inclusion in the cohort.
Read 11 tweets
Oct 26, 2023
These headlines have to be some of the most ridiculous I've seen in a while

The study tested 18 different PFAS in a tiny sample of 176 people. Of those, one had a barely significant association with thyroid cancer

This is genuinely just not news at all Image
Here's the study. I'm somewhat surprised it even got published if I'm honest. A tiny case-control study, they looked at 88 people with thyroid cancer and 88 controls thelancet.com/journals/ebiom…
Here are the main results. There was a single measured PFAS which had a 'significant' association with the cancer, the others just look a bit like noise to me Image
Read 7 tweets
Oct 11, 2023
A new study has gone viral for purportedly showing that running therapy had similar efficacy to medication for depression

Which is weird, because a) it's not a very good study and b) seems not to show that at all 1/n
Image
Image
2/n The study is here. The authors describe it as a "partially randomized patient preference design", which is a wildly misleading term. In practice, this is simply a cohort study, where ~90% of the patients self-selected into their preferred treatment sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
3/n This is a big problem, because it means that there are likely confounding factors between the two groups (i.e. who is likely to choose running therapy over meds?). Instead of a useful, randomized trial, this is a very small (n=141) non-randomized paper
Read 15 tweets
Oct 6, 2023
This is SO MISLEADING

The study showed that COVID-19 had, if anything, very few long-term issues for children! As a new father, I find this data very reassuring regarding #LongCovid in kids 1/n Image
2/n The study is here, it's a retrospective cohort comparing children aged 0-14 who had COVID-19 to a matched control using a database of primary care visits in Italy
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ap…
3/ The authors found that there was an increased risk of a range of diagnoses for the kids with COVID-19 after their acute disease, including things like runny noses, anxiety/depression, diarrhoea, etc Image
Read 13 tweets
Sep 20, 2023
This study has recently gone viral, with people saying that it shows that nearly 20% of highly vaccinated people get Long COVID

I don't think it's reasonable to draw these conclusions based on this research. Let's talk about bias 1/n Image
2/n The study is here. It is a survey of people who tested positive to COVID-19 in Western Australia from July-Aug 2022 medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
3/n This immediately gives us our first source of bias

We KNOW that most cases of COVID-19 were missed at this point in the pandemic, so we're only getting the sample of those people who were sick enough to go and get tested
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(