Press

Worm Wars

Replication research promotes open discourse3ie Impact - Evidence Matters
Go to Replication research promotes open discourse
Worm wars – The fight tearing apart the global health community, explainedVox
Go to Worm wars – The fight tearing apart the global health community, explained
Worm Wars – A Review of the Reanalysis of Miguel and Kremer’s Deworming StudyWorld Bank Development Impact Blog
Go to Worm Wars – A Review of the Reanalysis of Miguel and Kremer’s Deworming Study
New deworming reanalyses and Cochrane reviewThe GiveWell Blog
Go to New deworming reanalyses and Cochrane review
Worm Wars – Vox SentencesVox
Go to Worm Wars – Vox Sentences
Educational Benefits of Deworming Children Questioned by Re-analysis of Flagship StudyCochrane
Go to Educational Benefits of Deworming Children Questioned by Re-analysis of Flagship Study
How re-analysing the data of scientific research can change the findingsThe Conversation
Go to How re-analysing the data of scientific research can change the findings
Scientists Are Hoarding Data And It’s Ruining Medical ResearchBuzzfeed News
Go to Scientists Are Hoarding Data And It’s Ruining Medical Research
Are deworming programmes beneficial?Cochrane
Go to Are deworming programmes beneficial?
New research debunks merits of global deworming programmesThe Guardian
Go to New research debunks merits of global deworming programmes
Worms Win, Kids Lose? Our Statement.Evidence Action
Go to Worms Win, Kids Lose? Our Statement.
The positive impact of deworming in Kenyan schools: the evidence untangledThe Conversation
Go to The positive impact of deworming in Kenyan schools: the evidence untangled
Dear journalists and policymakers: What you need to know about the Worm WarsChris Blattman Blog
Go to Dear journalists and policymakers: What you need to know about the Worm Wars
Study throws doubt on education benefit of deworming childrenYahoo News
Go to Study throws doubt on education benefit of deworming children
Scientists Are Hoarding Data And It’s Ruining Medical ResearchThe Governance Lab @ NYU
Go to Scientists Are Hoarding Data And It’s Ruining Medical Research
Evidence for spending millions on deworming schoolchildren is inadequate, report saysThe British Medical Journal
Go to Evidence for spending millions on deworming schoolchildren is inadequate, report says
Worming our way to the truthTimHarford.com
Go to Worming our way to the truth
How to debunk a studyThe Economist
Go to How to debunk a study
Mass deworming: (Still) a best buy for international developmentVox EU
Go to Mass deworming: (Still) a best buy for international development
Deworming: What’s the deal here?DevEx
Go to Deworming: What’s the deal here?
Deworming: An informed debate requires a careful look at the dataInnovations for Poverty Action
Go to Deworming: An informed debate requires a careful look at the data
Explainer: Where were you in the #wormwars?The Guardian
Go to Explainer: Where were you in the #wormwars?
Worming a way to the hard factsBusiness Day Live
Go to Worming a way to the hard facts
Economic data is not always about numbersGulf News
Go to Economic data is not always about numbers
Despite foreign aid, Africa is still in the darkThe Gulf Today
Go to Despite foreign aid, Africa is still in the dark
Can deworming treatments at Kenyan schools cut absenteeism?World Economic Forum
Go to Can deworming treatments at Kenyan schools cut absenteeism?
Good science gone wrong?The Berkeley Blog
Go to Good science gone wrong?
Mapping the Worm Wars: What the Public Should Take Away from the Scientific Debate about Mass DewormingCenter for Global Development
Go to Mapping the Worm Wars: What the Public Should Take Away from the Scientific Debate about Mass Deworming
Half of biomedical research studies don’t stand up to scrutiny – and what we need to do about thatThe Conversation
Go to Half of biomedical research studies don’t stand up to scrutiny – and what we need to do about that
This academic debate about worms has an important lesson for the future of global povertyVox
Go to This academic debate about worms has an important lesson for the future of global poverty
Why you can’t trust journalismFusion
Go to Why you can’t trust journalism
Será que a medicina deve tratar todas as pessoas contaminadas com vermes parasitas?Jornal Ciência
Go to Será que a medicina deve tratar todas as pessoas contaminadas com vermes parasitas?
Evaluating benefits of de-worming kids opens a can of wormsHumanosphere
Go to Evaluating benefits of de-worming kids opens a can of worms
The Biggest Challenges Facing America and The WorldThe Takeaway
Go to The Biggest Challenges Facing America and The World
What Has Been Learned from the Deworming Replications: A Nonpartisan ViewMacartan Humphreys
Go to What Has Been Learned from the Deworming Replications: A Nonpartisan View
The author of a contentious study on deworming finally speaks outVox
Go to The author of a contentious study on deworming finally speaks out
Is it worth treating everyone who might get worms?British Broadcasting Corporation
Go to Is it worth treating everyone who might get worms?
What are the economic benefits of mass deworming of children?World Economic Forum
Go to What are the economic benefits of mass deworming of children?

The scientific case for deworming childrenThomson Reuters Foundation
Go to The scientific case for deworming children

Worms at work: Long-run impacts of a child health investmentPublished PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2016
Go to Worms at work: Long-run impacts of a child health investment
The case for mass treatment of intestinal helminths in endemic areasPublished PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2015
Go to The case for mass treatment of intestinal helminths in endemic areas
Commentary: Deworming externalities and schooling impacts in Kenya: a comment on Aiken et al. (2015) and Davey et al. (2015)Published PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2015
Go to Commentary: Deworming externalities and schooling impacts in Kenya: a comment on Aiken et al. (2015) and Davey et al. (2015)