يحاول ذهب - حر

On autism and vaccines there are lies and statistics

May 20, 2025

|

Gulf Today

During an interview in late April with Dr. Phil, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reiterated his appeal to parents on vaccine safety: “We live in a democracy, and part of the responsibility of being a parent is to do your own research.”

- Lynne Peeples, Tribune News Service

On autism and vaccines there are lies and statistics

The US health secretary has also announced his own investigation, pledging to find an answer to the autism “epidemic” by September. It’s an ambitious goal. It’s also a realistic one but only if he already has an answer in mind. To tell the story you want with statistics, you don't have to lie or fabricate data—though that happens, too. More often, statistics are manipulated, figures massaged and results skewed through subtler means. Sometimes, it’s sloppiness or unconscious bias at work. Other times, the distortion is deliberate. Whether the numbers attempt to tell a story about the economy, immigration, education or public health, we should empower ourselves to recognise the deception. Vaccine data are far from immune to statistical trickery and its consequences.

Not only might individuals skip a vaccine and get unnecessarily sick, but the viral spread of misinformation can poke holes in the herd immunity needed to protect a population. One new, untampered statistic tells a chilling story: A meager 10% drop from today’s already dangerously low measles vaccination rates could spark an estimated 13-fold increase in annual cases. Statistics wield incredible power. I developed a deep respect for them during my first career as a biostatistician. Today, as a journalist, I see numbers leveraged for good and for bad. I've seen them help the public and policymakers interpret complex data, detect patterns and make better decisions — evidenced in my reporting on data dashboards during the COVID-19 pandemic. I've also seen data withheld and statistics doctored for less-than-noble aims by chemical companies, the gun industry, police departments, the US military, climate change deniers and vaccine skeptics, to name a few.

المزيد من القصص من Gulf Today

Gulf Today

Trade tensions force EU to cut 2026 eurozone growth forecast

The eurozone economy will grow less than expected next year, the EU executive predicted on Monday, as risks from international trade and geopolitical tensions weigh on the single currency area.

time to read

1 min

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

45 Umrah pilgrims from India die in Saudi bus-tanker crash

As many as 45 Umrah pilgrims from Hyderabad died when a bus carrying them caught fire after a collision with an oil tanker near Madinah in Saudi Arabia.

time to read

3 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Nigeria coach Chelle blames 'voodoo' after World Cup '26 hopes crushed

Nigeria’s football coach has accused the DR Congo of practising 'voodoo' after his squad’s hopes of qualifying for the 2026 World Cup ended in a penalty shootout loss in the African playoffs final.

time to read

2 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Emirates orders 65 additional 777X aircraft worth $38b at Dubai Airshow

Emirates on Monday announced orders for 65 additional Boeing 777-9 aircraft, powered by GE 9X engines, worth US$ 38 billion at list prices, on the opening day of Dubai Airshow 2025.

time to read

3 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Gulf Today

What the air you breathe may be doing to your brain

NEW YORK

time to read

5 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Gulf Today

Casting director urged Shirley Henderson to ignore age

What was the question again? Sorry, I'm dreadful...\" It's the third time — or is it the fourth? — that Shirley Henderson has said this during our interview. Not that she has anything to apologise for; I honestly can't remember what the question was either by this point. Nor do I much care. It's hard not to feel hypnotised, in fact, as the actor drifts away on a meandering, mesmeric tide of anecdotes, reflections and tangents in her soporific, Scottish lilt.

time to read

2 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Japan moves to tamp down escalating row with China

Japan moved on Monday to tamp down an escalating row with China over Taiwan that has prompted Beijing to urge citizens to halt travel to its East Asian neighbour.

time to read

2 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Gulf Today

Adnoc listed companies deliver Dhs9.43b net profit in Q3 2025

Adnoc Group's listed portfolio companies have reported record financial results for the third quarter and first nine months of 2025, reflecting continued strategic execution, operational excellence, and a firm commitment to delivering long-term value to shareholders. The performance highlights Adnoc's integrated approach to growth across its energy and industrial platforms.

time to read

3 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Gulf Today

Fearless England ready to shake off weight of failure, Australia banking on ageing squad

Recent history will weigh heavily on the shoulders of England's players when they take the field in Perth on Friday seeking to end a lamentable run of Ashes failure in Australia.

time to read

3 mins

November 18, 2025

Gulf Today

Three American sisters chase glory at Winter Games

With their competitive instincts honed by a fearsome sibling rivalry, the Macuga sisters, a trio of rising American stars, are vying to compete in three separate disciplines at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics in February.

time to read

2 mins

November 18, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size