Evaluation of a meta-analysis of the association between red and processed meat and selected human health effects
S. Stanley Young, Warren Kindzierski

TL;DR
This study critically evaluates a meta-analysis on red and processed meat's health effects, revealing potential research practices and questioning the validity of the original claims based on p-value analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach by analyzing the statistical testing practices in the base studies of a meta-analysis, highlighting issues of reproducibility and research integrity.
Findings
Large number of statistical tests in base papers
P-value plots show random or mixed patterns
Questionable research practices may influence results
Abstract
Background: Risk ratios or p-values from multiple, independent studies, observational or randomized, can be computationally combined to provide an overall assessment of a research question in meta-analysis. However, an irreproducibility crisis currently afflicts a wide range of scientific disciplines, including nutritional epidemiology. An evaluation was undertaken to assess the reliability of a meta-analysis examining the association between red and processed meat and selected human health effects (all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, overall cancer mortality, breast cancer incidence, colorectal cancer incidence, type 2 diabetes incidence). Methods: The number of statistical tests and models were counted in 15 randomly selected base papers (14%) from 105 used in the meta-analysis. Relative risk with 95% confidence limits for 125 risk results were converted to p-values and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutritional Studies and Diet · Consumer Attitudes and Food Labeling · Meat and Animal Product Quality
