• TooSoon@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    Or is it “Depression linked to being poor and not affording proper food”?

    • DessertStorms@kbin.social
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      8 months ago

      Came here to say this…

      If only they’d have thought of learning even the most basic facts about depression first, they could have saved themselves a lot of time and money.

      But I suspect they were never looking to improve the lives of depressed people, but rather just to get on the latest buzzword-bandwagon that vilifies “ultra-processed foods” but never offers any viable alternative, let alone addresses the reasons why people consume, or even rely on it in the first place, and who benefits from making and selling it (because the answer is capitalism, and the capitalists funding these waste-of-resources hollow research projects wouldn’t fund one that points the finger back at them).

      This nonsense is just as much a distraction and a shifting of responsibility from systemic to personal as plastic bans and made up “carbon footprint” are.

    • Anamana@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      He said that because this is an observational study – one that looked at data already gathered – they cannot say highly processed food causes depression. That said, he thinks the data is strong.

      “We were able to adjust for a number of what are called confounding variables in our analysis to suggest that eating more ultra-processed foods really could increase your risk of depression.”

      “Sometimes what you see when you adjust for these variables is that the models or the results get weaker. And we didn’t really see that at all,” he later said.

      • BananaTrifleViolin@kbin.social
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        8 months ago

        Yeah this is dodgy. Basically he’s saying “we cannot say something but we’ll say it anyway,”. You only need 1 confounding factor or 1 incorrect adjustment to completely break the validity of any link.

        To say the link got stronger as they adjusted for different confounding factors doesn’t mean anything. It’s a specious argument.