Science journalists are expected to read papers, pick out the important parts, and rewrite them in their own words. Unfortunately, it's impossible to reliably rewrite a mathematical statement in different words without understanding what it means, so they sometimes fail and misrepresent the research they report on. But this is a problem with the journalism and its editing, not with the original research. It's good to avoid being misconstrued, papers should be written for experts first and journalists second or lower.
I just stumbled across Language Log: Thou shalt not report odds ratios (2007-07-30), HT reddit/statistics:
This was a failure mode of pop-sci journalism which I was not aware of (if I would happen to know enough to understand real papers, I’d definitely value pop-sci at minus-whatever in the meantime…)
On a related note this article got me remembering Understanding Uncertainty: 2845 ways to spin the Risk, which argues that certain presentations bias the understanding of probabilities:
I’d be quite interested if anybody could point me to further resources on good presentation of statistical facts (beside the normalization on one type of presentation), or on further pop-sci journalism failure modes.