Peter Attia· MD
so originally they they would um in those original cooling trials in neonates the the control group was hot so if you look at a baby's normal temperature after they're born they don't immediately go to 30 37 degrees C they may never get there you they'll slowly warm up over a day or so but th in those trials the control group were immediately warmed up to 37 and they alsoe uh frequently had fever and they weren't managing those fever because they were because that was in the era where you were worried about the kids getting cold other words you may have you may have made the controls worse off of and artificially created a gap