|
|
|
|
|
by maxbond
2228 days ago
|
|
I agree it's worth investigating. I just found it peculiar how unreceptive they were to the suggestion that the population was unrepresentative, yet how aware they were that the population was, in fact, unrepresentative. The original suggestion, way up thread, was not to overgeneralize studies. This is a huge problem in our society. |
|
However I find it unlikely that they are completely immune to the effect at a dose 10x higher than what the people in the original Harvard study were exposed to.
As to whether long term exposure has a mitigating effect. That's possible, but if the effect is as great as the Harvard study shows, then the navy almost certainly would have noticed the impact on new submariners in the last 80 years.
Btw the original Harvard study was mostly college students, so it's hardly representative either.
Here's another study that shows no impact on military aged people who aren't submariners https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31240239.
And here's a study that showed no impact from an introduction of pure C02 (these weren't submariners either) https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ina.12284?c...
And here's another one that shows no cognitive impact at 5,000ppm https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S03601...
All the studies I've seen that do show an impact, aren't using just C02, they are more broadly studying poor ventilation--C02 is just one factor. Every study that isolates C02 level shows nothing. The most likely explanation is that if there is an impact on cognition from poor building ventilation, it's not the C02 doing it.
I researched this topic pretty thoroughly a while back. I was worried enough by the hype that I bought a C02 monitor, but after I researched it, I'm not concerned.