Cope alumni... https://publicationethics.org/about/cope-alumni
As @Nasim Marie Jafry correctly points out, incidence and prevalence are not static. It's therefore important to state when (and where) the data...
Had a scoot around at some of your other work @Hip - and came across this: Prozac inhibits enterovirus replication wow. (although unfortunately...
Cytopathic - kills cells Cytolytic - kills cells by rupturing the cell membrane [I wanted to say "with tiny swords" - but that's not strictly...
I now have a copy of Ciba Foundation Symposium 173 for a short while...
I'll fix the link so it's more obvious (and also to add the pubmed link which includes further links to commentary). :) btw - Just found another...
Interesting you should say this. I found this article by Wessely and a student of his in BMJ from 1994 saying it's all the media's fault -...
Un-%^&*-believable! Note that they never say, "we are not saying that it is 'all in the mind'" as they have more recently tried to say - although...
While we're on Wessely's chapter, I'll note down a few things that stood out (sorry, this is a bit long!). First was the link with...
I think it's the "invariably and permanently" bit he is objecting to here. But one of those sources is his own. See this figure on the VERY NEXT...
Interesting to contrast the different approach to setbacks. Smith points out that "a continued high activity level can produce an exacerbation....
I'd check with @JenB ...
That's why I've never understood why they haven't got behind pacing as a management strategy. It seems like the most obvious solution. Unless they...
I don't think that's fair. Alcohol avoidance because of exacerbation of symptoms had been noted long before they got involved. It's more likely...
But was this a change to the management of the trial, or simply to the ways they intended to analyse it? The removal of those two measures and...
OK. So, in summary, we have Sharpe's study in BMJ (1992) which claims to show an association between support groups and poor outcome:...
I've seen papers where researchers have misquoted THEIR OWN PAPER! And it's then been used as evidence in NICE guidance. :arghh:
I've checked out reference 16 (Wilson et al) - which is this one: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2539669/ - and it makes no mention...
Their usual response to that tactic is to say, "Why are you so obsessed with something I said 30 years ago?" It is relevant to the subject of...
How will that help?
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