@Michiel Tack That was a truly brilliant blog: a beautiful assembly of strong evidence against the use of non-blinded trials with subjective...
My energy is very limited, but I would be willing to help if I can. I think the core principle needs to be something like “basing policy on the...
Comments on the paper (Part 1) Overall, the paper looks quite solid, with many different approaches used to reach findings that fit together into...
Only a day to read the paper? Good going. I've now watched the video and taken a look at the paper - and will try to explain, starting with my...
My updated take on the Stanford symposium, With thanks to you @Michiel Tack For a great detailed summary and tweets and @Ben H (and Cort) for...
I was only able to follow the symposium on Twitter and this is how it looked from there. How did it look to those who saw more of it than me?...
The results are certainly eye-catching. I've not yet read the full paper (and am hoping to avoid having to) . I wonder if those good people who...
Thanks to you and your fellow advocates for all that you have done, and achieved. Please do, and thank you!
Launch of Canadian research network makes a big statement about ME The Canadian government has announced a modest $1.4 million investment in a...
Good to see this published. Case reports are a very low grade evidence, so the key point from the Workwell tweet is "now to get funding and test...
I’ve shared the MillionsMissing Canada FB post about this on my Facebook page, and included a commentary. I would be hugely grateful to anyone...
Objective measures of post exertional malaise Just wanted to highlight the idea submitted by the famous anonymous author: The other idea is...
I have now read the Tomas paper and the Myhill/McLaren Howard response, and think it would help to focus on some of the detail. Overall, the...
This strikes me as a big step forward for the field. I remember reading the original paper and feeling that the results looked almost too good to...
Update [to blog]: Eric Lander highlighted further GWAS successes at a recent lecture at the Broad Institute (which is based at Harvard and MIT)....
Thanks,@Woolie, lots of good points there and I now know quite a lot more about anorexia nervosa. There are indeed several possible ways in...
Thanks, @Woolie, and I also thought it was interesting about the value of GWAS I think we might be slightly misunderstanding each other so let me...
Worth reading the study mentioned in the tweet: it relies on demographic data to reidentify people. there was nothing in the PACE trial dataset...
You have. Interestingly, there was no correlation between anorexia nervosa and SNPs associated with IQ. From the evidence presented we can't...
That’s very interesting and I wonder if they had any more success treating AN in the past. I also tought that @Woolie made a good point in reply:...
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