This.I would have bloody loved it if a well-designed trial showed a therapy to be effective regardless of the pathology underpinning that treatment; I'd much rather have a condition shown to be psychological and curable than physical and not.
This.I would have bloody loved it if a well-designed trial showed a therapy to be effective regardless of the pathology underpinning that treatment; I'd much rather have a condition shown to be psychological and curable than physical and not.
Spot on. My quoted blog’s opening line did make clear patients’ simple motivation:I hate the emphasis on this 'all in the mind' stuff - it's such a distraction, and always gives the impression patients start with foolish assumptions about mental illness or the way mind and body can interact. Was this ever the issue driving concerns about PACE? Certainly not amongst the people I'd been speaking to about it. Anyway, even if ME/CFS was a MH problem, the problems with PACE would still remain, and would still need to be spoken out against
Is there a rivalry between the Lancet and the BMJ at all?
Just wondered if it might be worth someone writing a letter (as a commentary like this one) to the Lancet re BMJs failure to reply (to @dave30th ) to problems with Crawleys research?
I have sent a comment trying to make that point and seconding Andrew's comment.
Which is the snowball effect. A virtuous circle. Exponential increases like this start off slow but accelerate more and more.Absolutely. I am sure this would not have happened without the Times article. Even the opening phrasing is similar, and the list of universities represented. Coverage generates coverage. This article in BMJ has now made it news not just in the general world but in the medical journal world. Whatever the limitations of any specific article, it's clear that the CBT/GET ideological brigades no longer control the narrative.
Quite. Even if the truth had been that PwME were start staring bonkers, and come up with ways to genuinely overcome that, it would have been very welcome. As it is it's not the patients who seem to be a tad bonkers.I would have bloody loved it if a well-designed trial showed a therapy to be effective regardless of the pathology underpinning that treatment; I'd much rather have a condition shown to be psychological and curable than physical and not.
What about the JHP? Might they do an update on this?Is there a rivalry between the Lancet and the BMJ at all?
Beat me to it. Was about to highlight that. Reading and believing are two different thingsMichael Sharpe responded too:
Odd piece in Times newspaper about pressure on the Lancet to review unwelcome PACE trial findings
This 'news item' refers to a three times recycled letter that has been repeatedly sent to the editor of the Lancet journal by campaigners, about a study that was published in 2011.
Edit to add: He claims no competing interests. Am I reading right?
Michael Sharpe responded too:
Odd piece in Times newspaper about pressure on the Lancet to review unwelcome PACE trial findings
This 'news item' refers to a three times recycled letter that has been repeatedly sent to the editor of the Lancet journal by campaigners, about a study that was published in 2011.
Edit to add: He claims no competing interests. Am I reading right?
Interesting that for MS's comment the title of the article morphed from "Pressure grows on Lancet to review “flawed” PACE trial" to being about "pressure on the Lancet to review unwelcome PACE trial findings"Michael Sharpe responded too:
Odd piece in Times newspaper about pressure on the Lancet to review unwelcome PACE trial findings
This 'news item' refers to a three times recycled letter that has been repeatedly sent to the editor of the Lancet journal by campaigners, about a study that was published in 2011.
Edit to add: He claims no competing interests. Am I reading right?
I think there were peer reviews, but the reviewers were as unscientific as the researchers.What is he talking about? What reviews?
I think there were peer reviews, but the reviewers were as unscientific as the researchers.