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You have a point there. Correlational data like this one can't really prove anything. Other confounding factors may have been responsible or partly responsible for the observed correlation. Population density is one good example. Maybe other demographic factors are also involved, which we can't be sure. Anyway, please feel free to share with me your idea (if you'd like). And thank you, too, for your thoughtful comment.

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Shin Jie Yong, MSc (Res)
Shin Jie Yong, MSc (Res)

Written by Shin Jie Yong, MSc (Res)

Named Stanford's world top 1% scientists | Medium's boost nominator | National athlete | Ghostwriter | Get my Substack: https://theinfectedneuron.substack.com/

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