@DrJBhattacharya thanks for responding. Few more points. Happy to agree to disagree. You mention topics that I consider to be part of the science advise process, and topics more related to the policy arena and how that works. Sorry, long thread, lost the blue button
I read that your criticism focusses a lot on the second argument and agree evaluation is important. Now there, I think this is very different in different countries, although the same trend (scientists that felt left out) is clear in many places.
I personally believe in the process of evidence synthesis from multiple sources, while maintaining the need for speed. That is how I saw this done in several countries in Europe, with often a key spokesperson conveying the conclusions to policy makers.
That may seem burocratic, but it does not need to be, and it makes debate and weighing of (partial) evidence, adding in local context and uncertainties inherent to the advisory process, which is what I consider to be important.
As for the science, you mention a list of topics, that each could be the subject of a full study on what exactly it is, how it is measured, what it contributes, etc. As an example: the “covid is airborne” topic – certainly on popular platforms- has become overly simplified,
presented as a “yes or no” answer, leaving the more difficult questions out: what is the contribution of different modes of transmission and how does that translate to interventions. That is what the advise needs were about.
SARS COV 2 is expelled by different activities, in particles of different sizes, behaving differently depending on environmental conditions, with virus infectivity decay rates that are context dependent, impacting the effect of interventions.
I do not want to go into individual studies on this platform, because that will trigger back and forth of papers that “show me wrong”, but do like this one that used methods from QMRA (common in the food safety field) to put this complexity together. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC80…
the airborne topic also showed a clash between science field that had not interacted before, with different methods and debate leading to different conclusions. That's fine, how science works. But taking that mix of views in for providing advise on how to act is a different task
Take also the issue of who is most at risk. Clinical impact clearly increased with age, and with underlying health condition. The debate also was triggered in our country, with suggestions to protect the high risk individuals and let everyone else go about their own business.
When looking at how to implement that, it was clear that it was not very realistic, at least not in our country. Mmany families and households and businesses have members belonging to a risk group or taking care of someone from a risk group.
Separating those was a theoretical concept, not an actionable one, not in our society. For instance, while the science advise was against school closures, they happened at the explicit wish from specialists worried about high risk children, and school- and teacher boards.
Now those are not scientific decisions, they are societal choices and therefore political choices. Those debates need to happen now: if we were to face a new pandemic, what would we do differently? I do not see much of that happening, unfortunately
In our country, we are testing doing simulation exercises with much wider representation, bringing together some of the science actors that had quite opposed views.
That has required many meetings to even only understand the common grounds at baseline
what are the key questions that science can provide evidence for, what data is needed, where is that data, how good is it and is it actionable (available in real time etc). I agree evaluation is important.
I think we need to get better, particularly in explain the level of (un)certainty and how that translates into a specific recommendation. I would love to see such studies funded.
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More from @MarionKoopmans

Jan 25
@DrJBhattacharya I will give this 1 try. I am looking at your inciting tweets with astonishment. You probably group me in the box of lock down pushers. I wonder if you ever have been in a public health crisis advisory role, hospital outbreak management team, employer health
protection responsibility. Let me explain the way this works: there is an evolving crisis, with lots of uncertainty, but a looming risk of serious impact. That means, there is an immediate and urgent need for detailed data on the evolving situation.
Let's start there: outbreaks typically start messy, particularly when there is a new disease: you have no way of diagnosing yet, you do not know the extend of spread, you do not know who are at risk, who contribute to spread, etc.
Read 21 tweets
May 29, 2025
Amazing. The scientists ( that challenge my take of things), their institutes, and now also the journals all are corrupt and in the pocket of pharma. Was signed: the head of HHS. This is a direct attack on science, scientists. The sneaky thing is: this narrative builds from
Valid criticism that you will also hear from withon the science community. For instance, if we want to study something, in most organisations this is not like “ yeak great, here you have a pot of money”. No, you write a grant application, that is reviewed ( anonymiusly),
And sometimes selected ( roughly 10% of them). Then you go through all permissions ( medical ethical, animal ethics, biosafety, etc). Then you do the work -usually with a team-, analyse the data, write it up and submit to a journal. There again the work is reviewed , criticised
Read 12 tweets
Jan 19, 2025
Shooting the messenger. The person who developed a global network for collaborative surveillance is scapegoated in a political “ trial”. Discussing safety of biosurveillance and details of reporting is one thing. But singling out a single actor and organisation for “ the safety
Of americans” is preposterous. I would suggest that this committee looks at the bovine H5 flu situation in the US, which is teaching material for universities and public health institutes across the globe on how to NOT do outbreak response oversight.house.gov/release/breaki…
I know that this message is going to get response, but would really ask everyone to think this through before shooting the next text: peter Daszak and EHA have been global leaders in our understanding of emerging diseases. Do some reported admin mistakes outweigh that?
Read 6 tweets
Sep 4, 2024
1. Een draad nav een belangrijk rapport: Oversterfte obv huisartsen informatie, 1 miljoen personen. Onderzocht in relatie tot vaccinatie (COVID19) , type vaccin, aantallen vaccinaties, en medische voorgeschiedenis.
2. Verschillende leeftijdsgroepen en de griepgroep onder de 60 jaar (de oudere griepgroep zit al in de leeftijdscategorien). Data 2021 in vergelijking met de periode 2015-1018. Oversterfte bekeken binnen drie en twaalf maanden
3. Oversterfte is toegenomen, 913 per 100.000 inwoners in 2019 naar 993, 987 en 961 per 100.000 inwoners in respectievelijk 2020, 2021 en 2022. Onderzoek moeilijk door koppeling gegevens van verschillende bronnen
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Aug 22, 2024
You only have to read the abstract to see how complex the mpox situation is in DRC. 1) Genetically diverse MPXV lineages co-circulate suggesting multiple zoonotic introductions from one or multiple reservoir species. 2) The Clade Ib expansion in South and North Kivu. 3)
Recent identification of mpox cases in Kinshasa shows multiple virus lineages being present within a large urban center. That shows there is no simple " do this or that" measure to control this. International news has focussed on the increased human - to- medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
Image
human transmission of Clade Ib, which is driving the international outbreaks on Ib, but let us not forget that the picture across DRC is very different with multiple zoonotic spillovers, all leading to smaller outbreaks. That requires different containment measures and an
Read 4 tweets
May 12, 2024
Stukken over de bv van ex wetenschapper Plasterk en . Stuk van maarten Keulemans legt de vinger op de zere plek: universiteiten worden ook gezien als verdienmodel, met de impliciete verwachting om " vindingen" te patenteren..volkskrant.nl/wetenschap/pla…
nrc.nl/nieuws/2024/05…
zodat bedrijven daar verder mee aan de slag kunnen. Dat levert soms lastige discussies op, inclusief de vraag: hoe onafhankelijk is een wetenschapper nog die probeert data te genereren die een patent interessant maken voor investeerders. Ik heb daar al mijn hele carrière .....
moeite mee. Zeker, de rol van het bedrijfsleven in ontwikkeling van bijvoorbeeld geneesmiddelen is cruciaal, maar dit verdienmodel geeft ook mogelijke perverse prikkels. Bijvoorbeeld: na enorme publieke investeringen hebben nu al twee bedrijven de stekker ...
Read 6 tweets

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