Yes. It is very inappropriate to even be comparing two completely different studies like this. The only time a question ("where did the 45 million go?") should be asked is when comparing a baseline measurement to a post-measurement from the same study, because there could be a myriad of reasons for the discrepancy. Makes for a good substack headline, I guess.
Yes. It is very inappropriate to even be comparing two completely different studies like this. The only time a question ("where did the 45 million go?") should be asked is when comparing a baseline measurement to a post-measurement from the same study, because there could be a myriad of reasons for the discrepancy. Makes for a good substack headline, I guess.
Yes. It is very inappropriate to even be comparing two completely different studies like this. The only time a question ("where did the 45 million go?") should be asked is when comparing a baseline measurement to a post-measurement from the same study, because there could be a myriad of reasons for the discrepancy. Makes for a good substack headline, I guess.