Masks…The curious case of the Danish mask study.

Read it and wonder about everything else that Facebook does, or that PHE didn’t.

DANMASK-19, the first trial of mask use during covid-19, was “negative.” Masks didn’t work. We knew this before the trial was published because we were told so on social media. The authors were reported by the media to be struggling to find a major journal for their trial.1 Journals weren’t proving brave enough to publish the study, said the authors, and they didn’t make a preprint available.

When the mythical trial was finally published last week in the Annals of Internal Medicine we didn’t need to read it. We already knew its damning verdict on mask wearing. Social media told us as much. Eminent professors of evidence based medicine, Carl Heneghan and Tom Jefferson, confirmed this in an article for the Spectator.2

Except that if you read the published paper you find almost the exact opposite.345 The trial is inconclusive rather than negative, and it points to a likely benefit of mask wearing to the wearer—it did not examine the wider potential benefit of reduced spread of infection to others—and this even in a population where mask wearing isn’t mandatory and prevalence of infection is low. This finding is in keeping with summaries of evidence from Cochrane.

A disagreement among experts, especially about interpretation of a study, is a common occurrence. It is the usual business of science. Only, Facebook didn’t see it that way. The social media platform that allows statements about injecting bleach to prevent covid-19, as well as calls to behead the leading US expert on pandemics,67 decreed that Heneghan and Jefferson should be censured for misinformation after they reposted their Spectator article on the site….

…..When accountable national organisations move in the direction of political and commercial interests, public trust is eroded, and the power of unaccountable and self-serving social media platforms only grows.

Read full article HERE.

 

 

The Monday Morning Quote #634

“The greatest discovery of any generation is that a human can alter his life by altering his attitude.”

William James

Black Friday. Blues.

(With apologies to Roger McGough, plus any excuse to play Steely Dan)

Got up, had breakfast.

Showered and had a shave.

Read the Black Friday offers in my in-box.

Deleted the Black Friday offers in my in-box.

Had another shave.

The Monday Morning Quote #633

“No-one can whistle a symphony.

It takes a whole orchestra to play it.”

Halford E. Luccock

How to do a mouth cancer check at home.

 

A video from Oral Health Foundation that may save your life.

Go to www.mouthcancer.org

It’s like politicising toilet paper…

“In my mind, it’s like politicizing toilet paper. It’s a basic hygienic measure.”

Physician and epidemiologist Céline Gounder, who serves on US president-elect Joe Biden’s coronavirus task force, ponders how to break through the politicization of mask wearing in the country.

From Science via Nature Briefing

 

The Monday Morning Quote #632

“One of the truest tests of integrity is its blunt refusal to be compromised.”

Chinua Achebe

The Monday Morning Quote #631

“Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced,”

James Baldwin

Image from The Guardian

 

Home Advantage

Paul Rees (no relation – as far as I am aware) writing in The Breakdown.

Take the “row” out of “crowd” and what are you left with? CD, a disc which is one way of trying to develop an atmosphere in an empty stadium. Home teams are having to generate their own energy with the lack of support having a clear impact.

The last weekend of the Six Nations saw the penalty count won by the away side in all three matches. The three hosts were awarded a total of 27 penalties with their opponents receiving 47, an average of nearly 25 a match compared to 18 in the opening three matches, which were all played before crowds and divided equally between the home and away side. Is it a coincidence that Manchester United have conceded five penalties in their last seven Premier League matches at Old Trafford when the previous five spanned 101 contests?

I would be curious to see the count in the matches where Nigel Owens officiated.

 

The Monday Morning Quote #630

“Waste no time arguing what a good man should be. Be one.”

Marcus Aurelius