I'm serious BTW. This is an example of what a good-faith process can produce.
It's from the ARIA group co-chaired by Dr Morawaska - the one WHO ignored in 2020.
The one coming out on the 18th is from a process controlled by the people who ignored her.
Put them side by side.
Once you've done that, and contrasted what you get from science with what you get from the medical bureaucracy, ask yourself this:
Which group would you trust to manage a pandemic?
Where would we be today if they had been in charge from the start?
When is enough, enough?
Over the next few days you're going to see the usual suspects, and some new ones, "spontaneously" using the same weirdly stilted language to say aerosols and droplets aren't that different.
Just like all those people "spontaneously" tried to deny #LongCOVID earlier this year.
Take note of what they say, and how, and compare the language when the new WHO document comes out.
It's not coincidence.
It's marketing. Medical influencers, WHO, public health, IPAC. Tame journalists, sycophants. A disguised ad campaign - paid for with your taxes.
Also: other than some ID & IPAC types being confused (5-micron error etc), what *exactly* is the ambiguity in use of "airborne" across scientific disciplines?
Being wrong isn't "ambiguity". You can't say 2+2=5 and then insist math is ambigous now, and we have to change it!
Strategy time!
We know how the WHO terminology announcement will go tomorrow. WHO slush fund PR budgets, comms teams and access-journalism.
But we have numbers.
*Everyone* please reach out to reporters, and ask them to look into the full story, and not just parrot WHO lines.
In particular, ask journalists to consider the WHO document and its attempt to rewrite terminology in light of the admission that WHO's failure to accept that #COVIDIsAirborne killed an enormous number of people.
So the terminology document is about what you'd expect. You can tell the aerosol people worked hard to limit the manipulation from the people who dropped the ball on airborne transmission in 2020, but the charitable interpretation of this effort is that it was a waste of time.
This is I think the real objective of the word games - breaking the link between airborne transmission and airborne precautions. The battle all along has been over which takes priority - science and evidence, or the opinions of connected ID docs? This is them declaring it's #2.
More of the same. "Airborne doesn't mean airborne, but droplet means droplet" - it's an effort to rewrite history and retroactively erase the failure to bring in airborne precautions in 2020.
If airborne means airborne, they committed the worst medical error in history.
You can tell the bad guys started with the outcome they wanted and worked backwards to create language that would lead there. It's not even internally consistent. All this fuss about avoiding dichotomies, and then "also, there's a category that falls to the ground within 2 m".
Kudos to the scientists who fought the good fight, and kept this from being a lot worse. In particular, forcing the inclusion of the word aerosol in the document, and explicitly pointing out that there is nothing conceptually new here, it's all word games and changing the labels.
The new battle is the same as the old battle. Should decisions be based on authority, or on science and evidence?
The bad guys will continue to insist that their opinions override science, and we will continue to fight them until we win.
Airborne is airborne.
#covi
This is an example of the kind of copy-paste journalism that WHO slush funds can buy, just by handing out press releases and making it easy to report what they want reported.
When you see it, please reach out to the news organization. We need numbers.
Here's the exact same story @CBCNews put out (see previous post) at CTV. Why do we pay for a public news agency if it's just going to parrot the for-profit media? If @CBC isn't providing added value and context on critical stories like this, what's it for? ctvnews.ca/health/after-c…
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@dsoq @PeoplesCDC "Narrative A" in the Isolation draft depends almost entirely (looks like >97%?) on the Radonovich 2019 and Loeb 2009 studies, which were intermittent-use trials (e.g. participants put the N95 on 👉after being exposed👈) - and they wonder why scientists don't take them seriously.
@dsoq @PeoplesCDC This is the problem with the mindless embrace of "Evidence Based Medicine" by public health. 👉EBM is not rigorous👈. The entire foundation for "Narrative A" is "we don't know how to use PPE and we don't want to learn, therefore it won't work".
Sloppy thinking, sloppy product.
@dsoq @PeoplesCDC The tension between clinical guidance development and science is in how a big, expensive, fatally flawed study (poorly designed, poorly implemented, misrepresented, etc) is dealt with.
Science throws it out.
Clinical guidance calls it "pragmatic" and "best available evidence".
@moss_sphagnum @PeteUK7 The study showed noninferiority of wooly hats under an intermittent-use protocol, with workers donning their hardhats when within three feet of a falling object. Experts attempting to educate IPC leads in use of PPE were drowned out by shouts of "pragmatic!" and "gold standard!"
@moss_sphagnum @PeteUK7 Initial results showed inferiority of wooly hats when exposed to falling objects on the jobsite.
The study was then relocated to an earthquake zone where participants were struck by falling debris in the community.
Injuries were not affected by the type of hat not being worn.
@moss_sphagnum @PeteUK7 Failure of randomization resulted in a statistically significant bias towards male participants being allocated to the more protective, standards-compliant hardhat arm of the trial, and female participants to the wooly hat arm, invalidating the trial.
I want to highlight a story from May 2020 that really hammers home the mismanagement of the pandemic by public health and infection control leaders.
Nursing home in Montreal, COVID everywhere, staff sick, people dying. It killed a significant proportion of the people there.
Why did this happen? The employer was denying N95s, denying testing. Not even properly isolating infected residents, and no one paying attention to ventilation either.
This sounds like: 1) homicidal stupidity 2) what IPAC is currently doing in most hospitals
The military was brought it, and because unlike IPAC they are not complete idiots and have an understanding of how to protect against biological hazards, they wore the proper PPE (and the nurses were allowed to have N95s as well now) - and someone checked the ventilation.
@EvonneTCurran Evidence Based Medicine. It isn't just that EBM has subjective methodological preferences that override research rigour. It's that belief in EBM as "how science works" is *inherently incompatible with rigour*.
It's like believing 2+2 can be 5 if the right people say it is. If...
@EvonneTCurran ...you train someone to believe that, you haven't just misled them about the outcome of that specific calculation. To get them there, you'd have had to destroy their connection to the logic of mathematics. You couldn't trust any calculation they did after that.
When used...
@EvonneTCurran ...properly - as a heuristic, recognizing it's only a heuristic - EBM can be useful. But believing EBM is "how science works" is incompatible with the rigour and logic necessary to understand and apply science.
You can have one or the other, but you can't have both.
This is just the tip of the iceberg of Russian manipulation in Canadian politics.
Pay attention to which politicians *don't* want it looked into, and ask yourself why that might be...and whether their wealth is consistent with their income.
Canada doesn't have just a peripheral role here either. Support for Ukraine - and the influence to spread that support - likely made replacing Canada's government with a friendlier one a priority for Russia. It actually looks like TENET got its start here: tennessean.com/story/news/cri…
I really hope CSIS and the RCMP are on top of this, and looking into Russian election interference in Canada via this program - and what other efforts are out there as well. What channels does Russia have into the secretive back rooms of our political parties?
@globeandmail Because our public health leaders are completely out of their depth, and care more about covering up their own incompetence than doing their jobs.
Because an MD is not a PhD, and letting cosplay scientists exclude real ones is not an effective way to handle a science problem.
@globeandmail Because medical politics is a toxic, authoritarian tar pit that selects for the worst members of the profession, and gives them control over their betters.
Because a "Thin White Line" mentality means outside criticism of pseudoscientific medical guidance is ignored.
@globeandmail Because journalists haven't put enough thought into who they platform, and just accept silly claims by clinicians with little or no relevant advanced training that they understand everything that touches human health better than actual experts.