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eng050599 t1_iy63n5j wrote

>Funny all these independent research groups from various facilities around the world are all thumbs (according to you)
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>Have you ever proposed a project, had it approved by ethics department etc then gained funding? It's a pretty involved process usually involving a team of people. I'm terrible at statistics but we have specific experts that tell us in advance how how many mice/fish/frogs/flies are needed for each level of results. If you think all those various teams were unaware then really the onus is on you to prove this incompetence.
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>The OECD guidelines you keep harping on about are for regulatory application approval and consideration for reviews. They dont usually apply to primary research. Have you ever actualy applied for a grant?

Doubling down on idiocy I see, and now pretending that you actually plan and conduct toxicity testing...how cute.

You keep on forgetting that there are different types of studies, and they all have differing abilities based on their design and statistical power.

The studies that you keep on harping about can only show correlation, and in the case of observational studies, that's the norm, as only the largest of these are ever capable of concluding that a causal link exists.

Consider the landmark cancer study of Hammond and Horn. It recruited over 100,000 subjects, and even that wasn't enough to be certain that the link was causal. It was only after the follow-up study of Hammond and the American Cancer Society followed over 1,000,000 subjects that the link was firm enough.

The reason why such numbers are needed is due to the increased variation of the population used in the study. The greater the variance, the greater the required population size is, plus in epidemiological studies, we are not dealing with controlled environments, and as such, the number of confounding and lurking variables makes anything but correlative associations next to impossible.

The OECD studies do not have such a limitation, as they are designed specifically to have the power of analysis to determine if the effects of a given chemical are causal in nature.

Now, first off, I can now see why so many of your posts cannot be seen. They've been removed by the moderators.

https://ibb.co/S7fqV9q

Note that it's not just your replies to me that are getting removed, so this might be an instance where you should take the hint, and realize that you're fundamentally wrong in your understanding of toxicology.

Case in point, in an earlier, and now deleted post (I still have the link though https://libguides.winona.edu/ebptoolkit/Levels-Evidence), you provided a link to the hierarchy of evidence...but you missed what types of studies that was related to, as well as where the OECD methods would fall under this hierarchy.

The page that you selected is in relation to clinical studies relating to treatment protocols, not assessing toxicity of a given chemical.

While toxicity testing is conducted on all pharmaceutical candidates, it's not in the clinical phase, it's all pre-clinical.

Quite literally, you're not even looking at the right place in the research timeline.

Also, and even more amusingly, we can extrapolate out this hierarchy to encapsulate toxicity assessments by looking at the design of things like the OECD methods.

More specifically, almost ALL of the OECD study designs are double blinded randomized control trials, with the test and control populations all randomly selected.

Guess what that makes Griem et al., (2015)?

Top of the bloody heap, as it is a systemic meta-review of all the relevant DB-RCT studies on glyphosate.

Finally, the age of a study isn't relevant unless you can show that there's an issue related to the data collected and/or the methods used. Simply pointing to more recent studies that lack comparable statistical power to the older studies isn't in any way, shape, or form, capable of countering the previous studies.

This is why I keep on pointing out the fact that you have NOTHING that can counter the compliant studies because literally every single study you choose to cite is orders of magnitude weaker in terms of just what it can differentiate.

Hell, even the authors of the study here don't even try to claim that they can show causation, and even their correlative associations are underpowered.

You don't understand this topic, and are unwilling to take the time to learn. Unfortunately this means that your only real use in this discussion is as an abject lesson of the dangers of the Dunning Kruger Effect and cognitive dissonance.

Edit: Oh, and your comment about the number of publications supporting you; again it's so cute that you think that, but you are very wrong, as you have NO publications that can show causal effects. This is the whole reason why we continually see the regulatory and scientific agencies reject the banal fear-mongering from the anti-biotech side of things.

Your supporting data isn't even close to equivalent, let alone capable of superseding properly conducted chronic toxicity studies.

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