If they had simply said:
That would have been more realistic.
But they just can't resist spinning and smearing. Understandable, I guess, when you consider how much they stand to lose from the truth.
But still completely unacceptable. They have been doing it for so long it is their default...
+1
@dave30th You are not morally responsible for this situation nor resolving it. Please make sure you take care of yourself. There is no advantage to anybody in burning yourself out. Perhaps take a decent holiday when you have returned home from this latest round of travel, to recharge your...
In fairness, David T did give us a heads up some weeks back.
But agree that a longer formal donation period would be good for the more funds challenged.
I encourage Henrik Vogt to go right on letting the world know of his views on these matters, in as public and undeniable a manner as possible.
I can think of no better way for him to ultimately and decisively destroy his own credibility and reputation.
There are few people I can find less...
Selection criteria are, and will remain for some time yet, a treacherous minefield. Including the problem that in the hands of different researchers the same criteria will not necessarily produce strictly comparable patient cohorts.
The Oxford criteria had to go, and I want PEM as a compulsory...
The LTFU results are the only outcomes of real consequence in clinical trials, especially for chronic illnesses.
The LTFU for primary outcomes is null, however desperately PACE tried to spin it.
If the LTFU for employment is also null (which I expect it to be), then the psycho-behavioural...
I often get moderate SAD when it rains for more than a few days straight, and hides the sun. Soon as the sun comes back out, I start feeling a lot better.
Runs in the family, at least two first-degree relatives have the same response.
Sometimes it really is a conspiracy, in some form or other (and they take many forms).
Really disappointed in The Guardian. Their handling of this issue flies in the face of the way they tend to approach most other issues. For example, the Australian version has an economics writer (Greg...
If I let my body clock do its thing, my circadian cycle stretches out to about 24.5 hours, so I will slowly cycle around the clock over a month or so.
Best way I have found so far to try keeping synced with 24 hours seems to be having the bedroom window curtains wide open and my bed placed so...
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