Lucibee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
It says mini documentaries, not documentary mini-series. To properly cover PACE, you'd need a documentary maxi-series with at least 7 seasons.
Coronavirus in Scotland: Charity warns Covid will cause a spike in ME cases - as it calls for 'harmful' exercise treatment to be banned
article here
https://www.heraldscotland.com/news...d-charity-warns-covid-will-cause-spike-cases/
The PACE study, a randomised control trial with 641 participants from Scotland and England, concluded in 2011 that psychotherapy and exercise could significantly improve and sometimes cure ME.
Patients who claimed GET was actually making them worse were dismissed and accused of hijacking the debate with a "very damaging" agenda.
Unpublished data from the trial was eventually released in 2018 following a lengthy legal battle brought by an Australian patient, resulting in other scientists criticising PACE as fundamentally flawed with "grossly inflated" recovery rates.
A 2019 review of the PACE trial by the UK's Health Research Authority did not find fault with the investigators, however.
I don't know about questions, maybe a few links to things they maybe should have read before 'answering'.Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have further questions.
does no one check their 'facts' these days(?)
I don't know about questions, maybe a few links to things they maybe should have read before 'answering'.
The article doesn't seem to be available at that link anymore.
Edit - the Herald article originally posted by Sly Saint and quoted by Tom Kindlon I mean. Sorry, for some reason having issues with quoting. Brain fog I suspect.
OK yeah that was a bad article.I noticed that too, I can't help but be a little suspicious as to the reasons why...
Cached:
https://webcache.googleusercontent....-cause-spike-cases/+&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=au
Wrong. There are claims of this, not evidence.Onset typically follows a bout of viral or bacterial infections such as glandular fever or pneumonia, with evidence also suggesting that ME is more likely to arise if the patient felt fearful or anxious during their illness - something which is more likely in a pandemic scenario.
Not what happened. At all.In 2017, the American Centres for Disease Control removed GET from its recommended therapies for ME following an outcry over a controversial clinical trial.
Also wrong. The researchers did claim that during their PR tour. Neither the evidence nor the papers claim that. In fact the papers explicitly state it is not curative.The PACE study, a randomised control trial with 641 participants from Scotland and England, concluded in 2011 that psychotherapy and exercise could significantly improve and sometimes cure ME.
Odd framing without attribution that makes legitimate complaints sound unhinged or insincere. This is poor journalism.Patients who claimed GET was actually making them worse were dismissed and accused of hijacking the debate with a "very damaging" agenda.
"Being beneficial" is not a valid anything. It is also false considering the numerous surveys and studies showing otherwise.She said: “Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) will not be suitable for everyone with ME/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS). While some studies report people feel worse after GET, these studies also reflect some people with moderate to mild symptoms of ME/CFS have found GET to be beneficial in treating their condition.
seems to be back up againThe article doesn't seem to be available at that link anymore.
Edit - the Herald article originally posted by Sly Saint and quoted by Tom Kindlon I mean.