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Comment by lisper

2 years ago

But it doesn't. It makes the unsubstantiated claim that shaken baby syndrome is junk science. It isn't. It's a real thing, at least according to the Mayo Clinic, which I consider more trustworthy on this topic than The Guardian.

It may well be that the evidence for SBS in this particular case was bogus, but it does not follow that SBS is bogus in general.