Absulute risk reduction in relation to relative risk reduction is a calculation, everyone can do oneself (with known numbers of the intervention and placebo group, and each outcome). Therefore nothing industry-sponsored 'fact-checker' could ever disprove.
In a climate where even the FDA ignores its own guidelines in also considering absolute risk reduction, it will of course only be fringe sides reporting on. Which still isn't a valid excuse why even scientific minded members here loose any sensible reasoning.
I do statistical analysis as one of my jobs and I've seen firsthand how people can do all kinds of statistical tricks to prove their hypothesis or disprove a hypothesis they don't like. In fact though statistics is very important it can be misused. Most people don't understand statistics and I have been at meetings where people misuse statistics to support a hypothesis but the audience is so confused by statistics their eyes glaze over and they believe anything the speaker is saying. I encourage people to LOOK AT THE DATA. The data from the Moderna trial speaks for itself and is easy to digest without complicated statistical tricks. People can draw their own conclusions:
Control group: 14,073 people
Vaccine group: 14,134 people
Control group number of people who got sick: 185
Vaccine group number of people who got sick: 11
Control group number of people who got severe illness: 30
Vaccine group number of people who got severe illness: 0
My sensible reasoning tells me that the data is pretty strong, regardless of what some skeptics Absolute risk reduction calculations claim
Edited by geo12the, 16 March 2021 - 04:55 PM.