Original Telegraph article
Michael Vaughan: If I had gone through this racism ordeal at 80, I would have wanted to be shot
Exclusive interview: Former England captain reveals that Azeem Rafiq case took such a toll that he could not perform basic tasks
By Oliver Brown...
Michael Vaughan: Stress of racism claims made me fear I had Parkinson’s
Former England captain reveals the ordeal of proving his innocence in Azeem Rafiq case caused inflammatory illness that left him ‘barely able to cross the road’...
I have been skimming this document the last couple of days. The quotations are from official reports so I would download the reports (if possible) and any other sources used, check the quotations and if they stand up, send the Williams document and all the other sources.
To be honest, I find...
I've said before that I've long thought my symptoms resemble those with concussion and CTE.
Since we're on this subject: article in Times (London) today on how research showing that even heading modern balls increased risk of CTE in former footballers was repressed by BMJ and the (now proven)...
I think this study inadvertently raises a question they have never been able to answer and one I have thought about for some time.
It used to be estimated that at any one time 100K people in the UK alone had ME. The figure used more often now is 250K. Over the last 30 years, millions throughout...
Standards for randomized controlled trials of efficacy of psychological treatments
David Mohr
In summary, well-controlled RCTs of psychological interventions are necessary for the protection of all stakeholders, including patients, from ineffective treatments. Considerations unique to RCTs for...
I think this is poorly worded and doesn't explain what I mean. I would say instead:
I'm not actually saying it does, just that it's possible that the proponents were seeing this type of patient in their clinics and these patients improved and so they convinced themselves that they had an...
Yes, but this is part of the disconnect. They were seeing one group of patients convinced they were seeing another. And the giveaway is when they create the Oxford criteria. That must have come from the clinics. It must have been what they were using to diagnose patients with 'CFS'.
And right...
Yes, but that's just noise from badly designed trials, the inevitable, small, subjective improvement in some patients that is going to occur using subjective measures in an unblinded trial.
I'm not sure that's true. Wessely's one and only trial (direct to PDF) for instance used Oxford criteria...
OK, but if we accept some patients may need to rationalize their improvement or decide they no longer want to malinger or have had enough of malingering for now or actually quite liked the chat and think they'd rather like to get on with things a bit more now or whatever, then that would still...
Or is it rather that they generally get excluded from such trials?
We know 40% of patients at an ME clinic did not turn out to have 'CFS' (direct link to PDF). Over one thousand patients were excluded from the original 3,000+ at clinics for PACE.
And does that perhaps explain in part why so...
It seems I take a slightly different view from others.
I think that some patients diagnosed with ME and long Covid are in fact struggling with their mental health (note: mental health, not mental illness) and benefit from therapy. It may be that Paul Garner was one of them.
I also think that a...
The question of balance has been debated a bit in the UK over the last 20 years or so.
There was quite a lot of criticism of the BBC in particular and the media in general for false equivalence in coverage of climate change. It was pointed out that by attempting to give equal billing in every...
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