and the obvious conclusion to that being that when we die, we really did bring it upon ourselves through behaviour and chronic deconditioning, as the current 2024 (re-dated 2019 review) implies, because the therapy causes no harms at all, and that's why there'd be no need for a reporting...
The UN Special Rapporteur of the Committee for the rights of persons with disabilities calls such things as trauma inducing instead of trauma informed.
You've just described in your last paragraph exactly my 6 week experience of CBT and Activity management in a clinic, diagnosed under the 2007 NICE guideline and PACE trial results in 2011. My form filling was worse on fatigue but I felt better on everything else. I had been given tools to help...
From the OCPD Foundation
Co-morbidities include eating disorders, as well as anxiety and depression.
Comorbidities — The International OCPD Foundation
Treatments include CBT, ACT and Exposure Therapy.
Treatments — The International OCPD Foundation
All of which seem to be the treatment...
Doesn't a chronology really show up how bad this has really been. Well done.
One could also argue that Cochrane's actions in December 2024 IS a response and that, in and of itself, is reason to escalate.
Therefore, giving them a further 3 weeks is a very reasonable attempt at reaching a...
Here's another news article last week for balance.
Doctors refused to remove young woman's ovarian tumours 'until symptoms got worse' Daily mirror 22 Jan 2025, a 22 year old woman
Oh dear, Mr and Mrs seem somewhat exercised this weekend.
Fourth day of the House of Lords debate at report stage of the Mental Health Bill early next week. (excerpt from the King's Speech at the opening of Parliament 17 July 2024)
Did the 'heartsink' patient gp training module (I had to...
Am I correct in thinking that the 2019 now 2024 review without the suggested editors note from the IAG only includes research on mild/moderate cases of CFS/ME?
If so, then this republished review as it stands will be used to support activity management based on a deconditioning/behavioural...
YES!
ETA: Carol Monaghan SNP read out in the Westminster Hall debate in 2018, an extract of a letter she received from someone who participated in the PACE trial.
and I'm sure I read somewhere that they adhered to COPE Publication ethics: An introduction to COPE
Retracting an article when an institutional review concludes no misconduct | COPE: Committee on Publication Ethics
But, am I correct in understanding they can withdraw entire reviews, or exclude certain pieces of research from a review, on various grounds which relate to patient safety and they are required to write a protocol, and protocols are very specifically detailed in the DoH?
Basic question from a non science background.
Does Cochrane have an ethics committee, and are the systematic reviews considered 'research' on human subjects for the purposes of the Declaration of Helsinki (both the 2013 and 13 December 2024 versions?) I'm guessing it does because a protocol...
I see Kate Kelland in Reuters wrote this. Wasn't it her who did that interview with Sharpe in 2019 quoting David Tuller?
This from the link
There's your smoking gun. Merry Croft died 23 May 2017. Context and timing is crucial. And they've done it again now, especially during the ME/CFS...
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