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  1. TiredSam

    The Hans Eysenck affair: Time to correct the scientific record (2019) David F Marks

    How on earth do you even define or measure positivity? The whole field of personality characteristics is complete hogwash anyway. Is the mood the person was in when they took the questionnaire controlled for? The way their environment may have recently influenced their "personality"? Give me one...
  2. TiredSam

    The Hans Eysenck affair: Time to correct the scientific record (2019) David F Marks

    He could have taken his own advice instead of passively accepting that a postive attitude makes a difference just because somebody said it.
  3. TiredSam

    The Hans Eysenck affair: Time to correct the scientific record (2019) David F Marks

    Even Stephen J Gould, in the Median isn't the Message, included this pile of shite: https://www.cancerguide.org/median_not_msg.html It's just everywhere, and often taken for granted and repeated by people who fancy themselves as critical thinkers and really should know better.
  4. TiredSam

    Childhood sexual abuse predicts treatment outcome in conversion disorder/functional neurological disorder, 2020, Van der Feltz-Cornelis et al

    BPS abuse predicts treatment outcome. The perpetrators are manipulative, predatory, groom their victims and like to establish themselves in high status public positions so they can carry on their abuse in broad daylight. #M.E. too.
  5. TiredSam

    Even the Best Scientific Studies Can Lie: The Case of Craniosacral Therapy, 2020, Jarry (McGill) meta-analyses

    A friend of my wife is a practitioner. She performed her art upon my head in our kitchen. My duties as a polite host prevented me from saying "but this is a whole load of ridiculous horse-shit" so I went along with it, much as I would have if someone has asked me if I'd like to hear their...
  6. TiredSam

    'Recovery' statistics

    Bullshit. It could lead young people to believe that recovery is unusual, because it is. That could be tempered by the news that younger people seem to have better prospects. But what some people speculate other people might believe shouldn't be a guiding factor here. How about just telling...
  7. TiredSam

    'Recovery' statistics

    I think of this often when trying to work out whether I really have improved in the last few years, or have just got used to it and adapted.
  8. TiredSam

    POTS - definition, diagnosis and symptoms

    No, I don't. I have improved a lot over the last couple of years. My sitting HR is often 50-70 now, and when I stand up, it rarely goes over 100. I can walk a bit faster, and when my monitor beeps that my HR is 116 (the alarm goes if my HR goes over 102) I can ignore that for a couple of minutes...
  9. TiredSam

    POTS - definition, diagnosis and symptoms

    In the early stages of ME, when standing up, my heart rate would sometimes shoot up to 120 and I'd feel very "wobbly". At the charite in Berlin where I got my diagnosis of ME, this is from my blog: https://forums.phoenixrising.me/blog-articles/trip-to-the-charite-in-berlin-part-7.1960/ At a...
  10. TiredSam

    POTS - definition, diagnosis and symptoms

    I have attended two clinics believing I may have POTS, my evidence being what I had read on forums as a new patient and my observations using a heart rate monitor. Turns out I didn't really have evidence and I don't have POTS.
  11. TiredSam

    The science of craniocervical instability and other spinal issues and their possible connection with ME/CFS - discussion thread

    I wasn't aware that we had any reliable figures, just various narratives.
  12. TiredSam

    Psychosomatic therapy for patients frequently attending primary care with MUS,the CORPUS trial: study protocol for an RCT-Wortman et al 2019

    Well if we're allowed to use any letters to make an acronym ... Cost-EFFectiveness of psychosomatic therapy for patients frequentLy attending primary care with medically UnExplaiNed sympToms
  13. TiredSam

    Social media data needed for 'harm' research, say doctors

    https://www.bbc.com/news/health-51134545 What could go wrong?
  14. TiredSam

    Assessing cellular energy dysfunction in CFS/ME using a commercially available laboratory test, 2019, Morten, Newton et al

    In Germany there are private doctors who offer a mitochondrial energy test, eg this fellow: http://www.praxisvantreek.de/ He also offers natural healing, alternative gynacology, LDN, cannabis as medicine, "healing touch", and gives talks on the dangers of vaccinations (which can cause...
  15. TiredSam

    Action CIND Webinar: "Why Working out Doesn’t Work" by Workwell Foundation

    Yep, when I'm symptomatic, anything to do with communication / language is the first thing to go, but I can still play chess or read. When that goes, I can still watch Southpark. If that goes, it's time to lie down and close my eyes.
  16. TiredSam

    Action CIND Webinar: "Why Working out Doesn’t Work" by Workwell Foundation

    I only have symptoms from physical overexertion. One of my symptoms is brain fog, cognitive issues like being unable to concentrate, remember, find words, follow a conversation etc. But this only happens as a result of physical overexertion. I can play chess for hours without symptoms, or read...
  17. TiredSam

    University of Liverpool’s Doctorate in Clinical Psychology cock-up at conference

    A statement from the performers: https://www.capoeiraforall.org/capoeira-for-all-gticp-performance-statement/
  18. TiredSam

    Action CIND Webinar: "Why Working out Doesn’t Work" by Workwell Foundation

    Yes, the diagram is a very accurate description for me. I have learnt to identify and heed the warnings (I know I'm lucky to have warnings before it's too late). My ME started as described under "long term" for many months. When I realised what was going on and adapted, I had "short term"...
  19. TiredSam

    Ensuring IAPT Makes A Real-World Difference - Scott: Dec 2019

    Wessely avoids precision at all costs, so you'll be very lucky to get a clear answer to that. The difference between the sausage machine and proper CBT is [insert self-deprecating bonhomie smokescreen here].
  20. TiredSam

    'Women have been woefully neglected': does medical science have a gender problem? Dec. 18, 2019, Nicola Slawson, The Guardian

    Well if we're trading anecdotes, there are women doctors around who can be thoroughly unpleasant to male patients. Not something I've experienced for a while, but when younger I noticed that occasionally a middle-aged woman doctor (perhaps sadly let down by men in her private life, who knows?)...
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