Thank you for your engagement with our research. Our research team is going on winter break so we might not respond to additional comments until after the holidays.
The point is to form a view on whether we recommend deworming. What matters to us are effects on subjective wellbeing. We would like to restate that this is the only SWB data on deworming that we could find, and this the only SWB analysis that we know of. The effects are non-significant, so this data does not give us good grounds to recommend deworming (see Section 4). The broader literature on outcomes other than SWB (reviewed in Section 1.3) is so mixed that our results do not strike us as particularly surprising – it’s just one null result amongst many.
We could just stop there, but because this is a novel analysis and dealing with non-significant findings isn’t easy, we aired on the side of being overly-thorough. For completeness, we discuss many other considerations in Section 2.3 (alternative analyses, Bayes factors, cost-effectiveness, converting GiveWell’s analysis to WELLBYs, etc. - cost-effectiveness being one of them). These converging lines of evidence all fail to provide good grounds to recommend deworming. Of course, non-significant findings do not prove there is no effect, and we discuss limitations of the data in section 5 that highlight key uncertainties about the results. In section 6, we discuss future research that could help address these limitations.
If strong evidence is produced showing that deworming is more cost-effective than StrongMinds for SWB, then we would change our recommendation. Collecting this data could be expensive, but given the insufficient evidence we think it is necessary for proponents to clarify the effect of deworming on SWB (which we think is what ultimately matters).
Have a nice end of the year and keep doing good folks.
Thank you for your engagement with our research. Our research team is going on winter break so we might not respond to additional comments until after the holidays.
The point is to form a view on whether we recommend deworming. What matters to us are effects on subjective wellbeing. We would like to restate that this is the only SWB data on deworming that we could find, and this the only SWB analysis that we know of. The effects are non-significant, so this data does not give us good grounds to recommend deworming (see Section 4). The broader literature on outcomes other than SWB (reviewed in Section 1.3) is so mixed that our results do not strike us as particularly surprising – it’s just one null result amongst many.
We could just stop there, but because this is a novel analysis and dealing with non-significant findings isn’t easy, we aired on the side of being overly-thorough. For completeness, we discuss many other considerations in Section 2.3 (alternative analyses, Bayes factors, cost-effectiveness, converting GiveWell’s analysis to WELLBYs, etc. - cost-effectiveness being one of them). These converging lines of evidence all fail to provide good grounds to recommend deworming. Of course, non-significant findings do not prove there is no effect, and we discuss limitations of the data in section 5 that highlight key uncertainties about the results. In section 6, we discuss future research that could help address these limitations.
If strong evidence is produced showing that deworming is more cost-effective than StrongMinds for SWB, then we would change our recommendation. Collecting this data could be expensive, but given the insufficient evidence we think it is necessary for proponents to clarify the effect of deworming on SWB (which we think is what ultimately matters).
Have a nice end of the year and keep doing good folks.