Yes, it is nonfactual because in both The Drive and the Yale blog post they are referring to a single study (N=1) from 3 years back, but The Drive is portraying these as in 2020 there was one research and now there is a new one. This is non-factual.
if you want to share, be realistic and post the pubmed/journal link(s). No clickbaity nonsense that is getting a free ride in the name of science!
🧵 👇🏼