I hope he'll acknowledge that there are many people with other stories for their recoveries - I got better because I took these expensive supplements! because I got acupuncture and reiki and crystal healing! because I realised I'd never really been ill at all! because the people at my church...
On the other hand, there are people who don't get vaccinated because they don't believe Covid is dangerous (for people like themselves), so if they go on to have LC-type symptoms they'll be less likely to attribute them to Covid.
When they say there were improvements in the treatment group but choose not to mention whether the control group also improved, do we take that to mean the control group also improved?
Can someone refresh my blurry memory on something in this study? The much-hyped "effort preference" finding is based on differences in activation of the temporo-parietal junction in the (small numbers of) pwME and healthy controls in the button-pressing reward test. Did they also look at TPJ...
but the Discussion says:
... so who knows what's what.
Looking at the graphs, some of them are basically flat lines from week 1 to 16, while in others the score for week 14 is about the same as week 1 but then there's an uptick right at the end at week 16 (maybe the subjects were happy that...
When I am queen of the universe, this kind of cherry-picking and suppression of results to fit preconceived ideas will result in the researcher(s) concerned being automatically disqualified from receiving any funding ever again. And possibly their institutions too. Tough love, it's the only way.
Shall we guess the results? Questionnaires will show small but probably not clinically significant improvements in the intervention group; "this shows that the intervention is safe and acceptable to patients... more research is warranted..."
I've tried to see if there's anything useful in here but it looks like a collection of just about everything anyone has suggested *might* be true about LC, with a lot of confident statements about microclots, faecal transplants and mouse models, etc.
Silvia Oliver-Mas is also an author on this 2023 paper "Hippocampal subfield abnormalities and biomarkers of pathologic brain changes: from SARS-CoV-2 acute infection to post-COVID syndrome"...
(Not sure if this is the right place to post this, re evidence of harms; feel free to move)
Just wanted to flag up this sentence:
"Awareness was growing of the ineffective or possibly harmful16 effects of approaches such as a graded exercise programme"
in...
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