Our analysis of pandemic excess deaths for the Nordic countries 🇩🇰🇫🇮🇮🇸🇳🇴🇸🇪is now published. #tldr:
-major dependencies on method and time-period used
-unusual 2018/2019 mortality years affect estimates
-concerns about @IHME_UW model. /1 doi.org/10.1093/ije/dy…
IHME @IHME_UW (doi.org/10.1016/S0140-…) is a major outlier, giving 2x total Nordic excess death vs. other models. Our estimate of IHME expected deaths (red) seem inconsistent with register data and substantially too low, causing too high excess deaths for 🇩🇰🇫🇮🇸🇪. /2
IHME also gives implausible reporting ratios and IFRs, e.g., 🇩🇰 & 🇫🇮 several-fold worse at identifying covid-deaths and much more lethal infections than 🇳🇴 and 🇸🇪 -errors explained by erroneous death estimates. doi.org/10.1016/S0140-… /3
IHME models have major influence –published this Spring in @TheLancet, already cited 100s of times and used in the Lancet Commissions’ report (doi.org/10.1016/S0140-…) as premise for all discussions, incl. country comparisons that we show are unreliable. /4
Other models that we analyzed, WHO, Economist (in two versions), WMD, and BME – had much more similar estimates, more consistent with trends derived from historic register data, and much more country-similar reporting ratios (below) and IFRs. /5
For the future, our study illustrates need for data-based critical post-publication review, comparison & sensitivity analysis of complex models whose uncertainties and assumptions are hard to interpret @TheLancet@richardhorton1 /6
Note: All estimates should be taken with caution as they miss detailed demographics, such as changes in the age group populations over the study period. We have a study soon to be submitted where we analyze population structure effects on mortality. /7
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Reg. this "wonder drug" @Telegraph article: 1) The article claims that "experts" suggest the "beginning of the end" of Alzheimer's disease.
There is no indication we are seeing an end to Alzheimer's disease. This is misleading, harmful hype, playing with patient fears and hopes.
2) The article claims that "most common side effects were headaches and the Aria swelling". In this risk "summary" deaths are omitted entirely. And while %efficacy is stated the substantial %adverse effects is omitted-critical benefit-risk context not reaching @telegraph readers.
3) It turns out the "end" claim comes from a single (!) interviewed expert (so not "experts", that is misleading why add the s?). So while obscuring the risk side, Argumentum ad populum is used here in a curious false-premise version of "appeal to many". en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argumentu…
Since IndieSAGE now tries to revise history to appear mainstream, a short thread on what they actually were, what they did, who they were associated with, and why it matters for science and our democracy. /1
First of all, IndieSAGE is a zerocovid group: It recommended zerocovid in England as late as Aug 2020 and members supported zerocovid even into 2021. Trying to revise history, claiming "advice was largely in line with SAGE" is thus misinformation. /2
Second, IndieSAGE is closely affiliated with World Health Network led by Yaneer Bar-Yam and Eric Feigl-Ding. The appendix with ~130 WHN co-signatures is a revelation to anyone interested in pandemic Twitter and lists all their partner ZC groups /3 thelancet.com/journals/lance…
Below a list of misinformation from @DrEricDing from the zero-covid group World Health Network who has been repeatedly debunked by others, documenting the scientific problem of @peterhotez's endorsement. whn.global/meet-our-team/
Just noting that the editor has a company selling N95 masks so for legal reasons and in democratic/public interest it may be fair to label the below advocating for intense post-pandemic use of HCW masks as a commercial / marketing advertisement. co2radical.com.au/co2-monitoring…
Other views from same editor: 1) vaccines "last resort" that you "don't want to have to use" 2) chronic disability a "catastrophe for our species"; 3) "they killed the last queen by infecting her with covid"; 4) amplifying debunked Mpox fake news.
The editors of the "John Snow Project" were systematically involved in spreading monkeypox misinformation, incl. the fake news from Spain implicating community transmission that was debunked by e.g. @kallmemeg @MarionKoopmans
@benryanwriter @SaskiaPopescu
@US_FDA is likely to approve #lecanemab next week after advisors "voted" for efficacy. Yet while statistically significant, this effect is very small (2.5%) & below clinically meaningful (MCID) (figure by my dear colleague prof. Poul Høilund-carlsen). /1
https://t.co/DmVr64jHvQcontent.iospress.com/articles/journ…
Also, the effect is very heterogeneous, raising the concern that the groups could not be treated as one in the prespecified endpoint, which would then be statistically inappropriate. A small very heterogeneous effect increases the risk of bias. /3
Jeg havde egentlig lagt pandemidebatten bag mig, men nødt til at reagere, da det her er Alternativets kampagneleder. Skolelukninger er nok det mest afklarede spørgsmål overhovedet i den pandemiske debat -holdning i strid med lang række studier og udmeldinger fra organisationer.