Life-saving mental health care must not be ‘an awful experience’ for patients
Sir Simon Wessely
Article in Sunday Times (requires subscription)
"For those with mental disorders, the Mental Health Act can take away your liberty and impose treatment that you don’t want."
what about those...
for four years? on their own website. Gabrielle Murphy, in her talk, was singing about the wonders of Google and how she could look something up on the internet if it was raised by a patient.
They are clearly proud of their involvement in PACE; you'd think that someone from her department or...
that makes it even worse! the fact that this false info has been sitting there for all to see and no one has questioned its validity.
It should be raised with the NICE committee. How can someone who OKs this complete distortion of the facts and adds fabricated info to boot be relied upon for...
On Royal Free website:
CFS/ME research
"This purpose of the PACE trial was to better understand the possible causes of chronic fatigue syndrome." Really? Since when?
https://www.royalfree.nhs.uk/services/services-a-z/fatigue-service/cfs-me-research/
(see also Graded exercise...
I actually didn't say that they should have mentioned the PACE trial (in this article), I was referring/pointing to a previous article they did about the PACE trial and how that was also biased, and gave Michael Sharpe the last word.
I haven't got the energy to keep going with this but this...
have only listened to the first 12 minutes.
Not as trivialised as the description might suggest. Also has people phoning in.
https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/the-hook-up-podcast/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-and-love/11218260
Like a lot of things, it would take a major disaster to force an enquiry for it all to come to light.
This is unlikely to happen, particularly as there is no official means of reporting/registering of harms of any non-drug therapies.
Have only skimmed it but noticed that they say kids in the 'more active' group had higher anxiety than in the 'low activity' group; could this be the 'tired but wired' aspect that a lot of us experience when we do too much? I can see how they might confuse this with 'anxiety'.
Also don't these...
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