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Peter Nayland Kust's avatar

From the start of the Wuhan outbreak there has been a tendency among medical experts and researchers to seize on a particular data point and then not update their understanding with fresh data.

Another example of this was the early estimate that 20% of COVID cases would fall into a severe or critical classification. Even in China and particularly internationally, the publicly available data never really supported that percentage.

Closer inspection of the "official" estimate put out by the WHO among other sources indicated it came from a single study of Wuhan cases, which then became embedded in the prevailing narrative.

https://allfactsmatter.substack.com/p/narrative-fail-were-missing-some?s=w

Having dealt with catastrophic technology infrastructure failures during my career as a Voice and Data Engineer, I am very sympathetic to the position doctors are in at the outset of a major disease outbreak: information is sparse, data is constantly coming in largely unstructured, and what makes sense today can make no sense tomorrow.

However, the object lesson should always be a modicum of humility: recognize that the data is in a state of flux, recognize that the best available understandings not only are subject to change, but are likely to change, and retain the intellectual flexibility to adapt one's thinking to new data as it becomes available.

Reading this discussion about NSAIDS, it strikes me as yet another example of how the medical community failed to hew to that standard regarding COVID.

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Guidothekp's avatar

If California style misinformation laws become the norm (Sb2098), the problems you listed will go away. The law prohibits doctors from speaking up or disagreeing with Dr. Gavin Newsom.

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