This study by @TracyBethHoeg, @KrugAlli et al. reinvents the need for the adage "absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence" as a response to the authors’ novel approach “If you don’t have symptoms, you don’t have cases."🧵 bjsm.bmj.com/content/bjspor…
The study is allegedly about player-to-player transmission being contained by the protocols for youth ice hockey the authors develop. Alarm bells ring almost immediately when the authors introduce us to the study’s crew: a “volunteer epidemiologist”,
and other “neutral” parties.
After describing previous protocols, the authors take us to their “New Protocols” both of which can be seen in this table. With New Protocols in place, practices resume; notably without knowing the starting infection rate.
h/t @justthefacts85
Nonetheless, 148 hockey players have 500 practices over an 18 week period during which time 5 cases (down from 14) are detected.
Lest we think the volunteer epidemiologist isnt up to the task, we are told s/he has a whiteboard.
Such impressive equipment, however, can not overcome the study’s considerable methodological flaws; foremost of which is that the study is based on symptoms which the authors characterize, for reporting purposes, as “the common cold”.
By design then, the study excludes asymptomatic infections which is an odd choice for a study on the very people, the young, that the virus infects primarily asymptomatically. What’s more, even asymptomatics contribute to viral load.
This matters especially for hockey rinks where the relative frequency of outbreaks is partially attributed to the plexiglass surrounding the rink which inhibits free airflow. washingtonpost.com/health/2020/12…
The odd nonchalance towards asymptomatic infection is made even odder when the authors describe how the one time free on-site clinic discovered “three additional asymptomatic infections.”
The study’s focus on symptoms is not the only methodological hurdle it faces. It also relies on voluntary reporting which curiously, goes to the ice hockey director first and then the epidemiologist.
Though the sentence which begins “When a family reported a positive case or potential exposure…..” excludes symptoms, this seems to be an oversight.
Given the local health department was “overwhelmed” at the time, it’s not clear the extent to which families were notified of potential exposures. More importantly, outside of the single on-site event, testing was voluntary and the burdens of testing fell to families.
This isn’t just a problem of inconvenience. The study admits parents were having to deal with insurance and/or out-of-pocket test costs.
Apparently aware of these significant hurdles, the authors admit there were likely “undetected cases”. To compensate, a survey (presumably symptom based) is conducted. There is no indication that the authors felt compelled to consider asymptomatic infection an “undetected case”.
Additionally, though it is probably a fair assumption, the possibility of post-vaxx infection or re-infection seems to be excluded in the calculation of undetected cases.
In what is arguably quite the understatement, the authors admit that they might have missed player-to-player transmission, which is an odd concession given the author's purpose is to study transmission.
However, they say “case investigations” found only “household transmission”. W/out casting doubt on the volunteer epidemiologist's efforts, tracing is difficult & not clearly possible when the only clues it follows are reported symptoms & whatever tests parents seek out & report
For example, after a positive case, the authors tell us only that “no further symptoms or postives tests were reported” but do not tell us how many of the exposed were tested.
The authors’ justification for concentrating on symptomatic cases only is because, they tell us, the risk of transmission from asymptomatic cases is just 0.7% .
Notably, that’s a *household* transmission rate which again matters very much given the object of concern is a ripe-for-transmission hockey rink. It’s not just the plexiglass either.
The authors have an additional study they say establishes asymptomatic transmission’s low risk but at this point one has to ask: If you think the asymptomatic rate is well-established, what is the point of a study of transmission in a largely asymptomatic population?
Unhappy with the CDC’s paltry number of myocarditis cases attributable to mRNA vaccines, @TracyBethHoeg et al set out on the vast sea of VAERS in hopes of catching more fish by using "broader search and inclusion criteria" aka a bigger, but definitely not better, net. 🧵
Admirable if only for the nakedness of its ambition, the authors don’t hide that their aim is to “update” the CDC’s estimate,
Judith Danovitch's researches how preschool & elementary school kids evaluate & think about information. In this article, she evaluates claims of "mask harms" and the impiactions, for cognitive development, of not seeing mouths, smiles & frowns.🧵 nytimes.com/2021/08/18/opi…
Daovitch admits that, though there is little data on masks per se, there is evidence from head coverings. “Children in cultures where caregivers & educators wear head coverings that obscure their mouths & noses develop skills just as children in other cultures do.”
What’s more, she adds, blind people still learn to speak, read and socialize.
Covid minimizers, like @drlucymcbride, are like eclipses that cover astronomical objects. The disaster behind their obfuscations is still there despite the cover of misleading and often irrelevant “good cheer” they try to throw in front of it. 🧵 theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
Implying the well-off and protected have nothing to fear because hospitals are only filling up “in states with where low vaccination rates” may reassure the privileged McBride seems most concerned with.
While @ProfEmilyOster denies consulting with @GovRonDesantis, she hasn’t yet repudiated her study. She should. The study claims to show mitigations don't work but has so many design flaws, even effective measures would fail her trials. Very long🧵. nytimes.com/2021/06/22/us/…
Probably because they’re assumed to be the “gold standard”, Oster’s studies employ the all the signs of being Randomized Control Trials (RCTs) in which mitigations: mask mandates, in-person density and ventilation are compared with schools absent those same mitigations.
Oster’s conclusion is, more or less, that mitigations make no difference to Covid case counts in students, staff and teachers associated with schools.
They won't stop will they? Despite the evidence that cases in kids rise even when adults are well vaccinated (see the UK), the fact is an adult vaccinated today is weeks away from providing indirect protection. They have no interim plan except widespread infection of kids.
No, @TracyBethHoeg, the article you point to does not claim delta is not "resulting in increased rates of in-school transmission”. In fact, it says the opposite. 🧵
Speaking of the 12 presumed cases of in-school transmission for the summer, the article offers this: "By way of comparison, the district reported 2 cases of apparant transmission during the regular school year." latimes.com/california/sto…
In fact, the article very explicitly implicates Delta in the rise of infections.