cherdano, on 2020-November-18, 06:24, said:
Does it worry you when I tell you that there is a 16.66666...% chance of rolling a six with your next dice throw?
Uhm, that's why the trial was double-blind - the participants wouldn't know whether they got the vaccine or the placebo. (Unless they could guess from the side effects - but that would mean those with the placebo would be more cautious, i.e. the actual efficacy would be even bigger than observed.)
Given case numbers in the UK and the US, I suppose we can look forward to other vaccine trial reporting soon as well.
Yes, it does worry me when you say there a 16% chance etc, and I think that you know why. What you are doing, metaphorically speaking is projecting beyond the available data.
We are not talking about a single 'die' and people are actually dying. So, it's not just a matter of rolling the dice if I can be light-hearted and mix my metaphors.
If 2 people are sick and both are given an effective drug and only one gets better, can we claim that the drug has only a 50% success rate? should we now take it off the market because it doesn't work?
Of course not. This is really simple stuff. You CAN turn any ratio into a percentage, that doesn't mean that it's a good idea, because if the numbers are small it's misleading. Here, the numbers are in excess of 10:1 so I'm happy.
I would prefer it if you said 1 in 6.
As to the second point, even though the trial was double-blind, the trial was still a trial. I assume that you have no experience with clinical trials. If you did, you would know that trial participants are a very special breed of highly motivated altruistic people.
I suspect that is one reason for the apparently very low rate of infections. In the placebo group the positivity rate was .006% (90/15000). That seems like a pretty effective treatment don't you think?
Trial participants are very altruistic, highly motivated and very health conscious.
They are not the same as members of the general population.
They get much better health care than other people.
Trial participants are also ordinary people, they get 'side-effects' just from being in the world. Sometimes the side-effects occur in the trial arm, sometimes not, sometimes they are serious, sometimes not.
Fortunately, trial participants no longer include prisoners etc, although in some countries where there is a history of human rights abuses they may well be using unwilling participants.
China for example is known for this.
Ireland is threatening to forcibly repatriate healthcare workers without citizenship now that the pandemic is waning.
Stalin forced slaves onto the battlefield. I have no idea what is happening ATM.
Americans and British and everyone else in the world enjoy the use of slave and child labour from other countries.
It's nothing personal, I am just a stickler for accuracy and precision. I see things as they are. When I get things wrong I admit it. I don't care.