One group of science-minded patients – including Tom Kindlon, Robert Courtney and Alem Matthees – carefully examined the trial publications, and came across some striking oddities. For example, midway through the trial, the researchers had altered their definitions of improvement and recovery.
Could these changes have worked to favour the trial’s hypotheses? The only way to know for sure was to examine the data. So, these intrepid patients wrote data requests, first to the researchers themselves, then to their institutions, and then finally as requests under the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act.
At every turn, they were met with refusals – and worse. They were accused of harassment, of vexatious behaviour. They were described by the trial investigators as part of a “highly organised, very vocal and very damaging group of individuals”, who wanted to expose and discredit the patients who participated in the trial. But they did not give up.