A post for any casual visitor to this forum who is puzzled by the strong reactions to paper being discussed:
This "research" paper - how did an opinion paper qualify for a 'research' label? - is clearly part of a wider coordinated strategy by a group not exactly motivated by pure and selfless altruism. Fittingly this group calls itself a consortium, a term typically used in corporate contexts.
There is a thesis here for a Masters student, or a nice long in-depth feature for a brave investigative journalist (not looking at you Dave, it would be nice to have somebody new get their teeth into this): compare the tactics of this consortium & associates to the Tobacco industry playbook.
To make it easy for you, here are just a few leads on what this consortium and their friends are up to:
- they manufacture doubt by claiming scientific controversy where almost none is left, by manufacturing misleading literature (this is not the first such paper) and by taking advantage of the poor scientific literacy of the general public, media and politicians
- they manufacture doubt by cherry-picking and misrepresenting data and the body of the evidence
- they manufacture a false impression of large support for their views by listing lots of authors (though still only ever their own little circle) and citing each other, and by organising "scientific" conferences that then appear to support their particular opinions
- they strawman and misrepresent the opposition
- they deny the dangers
- they claim to fight for individual freedom of choice
- they lobby behind the scenes (note that some names known to engage in lobbying are not on the author list, quite possibly because they want to preserve the pretense of independence when they go about lobbying)
- they manufacture the impression of being representatives and defenders of neglected patient groups (astroturfing)
- they portray opposing voices as irrational activists at best and deadly dangerous ones at worst
- they front individuals perceived as reputable by outsiders
- they ...
A closer look is bound to reveal more, a lot more, but the above should be enough to get you started
Very well summarised, Ravn.
I've had a go at picking apart the abstract, which is wrong on every level, yet written to sound convincing:
Abstract said:
The ‘Oslo Chronic Fatigue Consortium’ consists of researchers and clinicians who question the current narrative that chronic fatigue syndromes, including post-covid conditions, are incurable diseases.
Referring to 'Chronic fatigue syndrome
s is a sneaky way of pretending all fatiguing illness that doesn't have an easily recognised biological basis can be lumped together. In the article they include, for example, burnout, which is not the same condition as ME/CFS. It is nonsense to try to attribute the same biological explanations, treatments or recovery rates to such different conditions simply on the grounds that both involve a vaguely defined symptom like fatigue.
Fatigue can vary in interpretation from tiredness from lack of sleep or fatigue in a healthy person after exercise, to psychological fatigue in depression, to abnormally rapid muscle and/or cognitive fatiguability that occurs during and after normal daily activities in ME/CFS.
There is no claim by anyone that any fatiguing illness in their list is incurable, particularly post infectious fatigue such as Long Covid, which is well recognised as having quite a high recovery rate in the initial few months to two years. Recovery from ME/CFS is much less likely after 2 years, with some figures given as about 5%, possibly higher in children.
Abstract said:
Instead, we propose an alternative view, based on research, which offers more hope to patients.
This is not so much an alternative view, as an old discredited view reheated. The research quoted has been shown to be very poor quality, and routinely misrepresented by its proponents. The so called hope it offers is false hope.
Abstract said:
Whilst we regard the symptoms of these conditions as real, we propose that they are more likely to reflect the brain's response to a range of biological, psychological, and social factors, rather than a specific disease process.
The proposed biopsychosocial model is based on flawed science and opinion not based on sound evidence. It is not new, it is rehashing of old ideas adhered to by a small group of clinicians despite evidence that treatments based on the idea are ineffective and many report harm.
Abstract said:
Possible causes include persistent activation of the neurobiological stress response, accompanied by associated changes in immunological, hormonal, cognitive and behavioural domains.
There may be evidence to support this for burnout. There is none for ME/CFS.
Abstract said:
We further propose that the symptoms are more likely to persist if they are perceived as threatening, and all activities that are perceived to worsen them are avoided.
This attempt to discredit the whole idea of post-exertional malaise as a physiological phenomenon is despicable and wrong. PEM is not a result of anxiety, it is a usually delayed physiological response to activity beyond the person's current activity limit, and results in significantly increased sympoms such as pain, orthostatic intolerance, nausea, headache, sore throat, sensory sensitivities etc, as well as significantly reduced ability to function physically and cognitively.
People with in PEM don't choose to lie down in darkened rooms, their symptoms give them no option. Repeated and prolonged bouts of PEM can lead to long term or permanent worsening. Activity management aimed at avoiding triggering PEM is not about anxiety or catastrophising, it is sensible response to known likely outcomes.
Referring to activities as 'perceived to worsen' symptoms is insulting. PwME don't just perceive/imagine worsening, they experience it physically.
Abstract said:
We also question the idea that the best way to cope with the illness is by prolonged rest, social isolation, and sensory deprivation.
Characterising rest, isolation and sensory deprivation as choices based on misunderstanding of how to cope with illness is wrong and insulting to patients. People with severe and very severe ME/CFS are not choosing their lives being so restricted, the disease gives them not alternative. If you faint when you sit up, you have no choice but to lie down, if sounds cause physical pain, you are forced to live in quiet. If seeing a friend for a few minutes makes you so sick you can't get out of bed or eat for the next weeks, you are forced into isolation. To describe this as people making bad choices is insulting and shows complete lack of understanding of PEM and severe and very severe ME/CFS.
Abstract said:
Instead, we propose that recovery is often possible if patients are helped to adopt a less threatening understanding of their symptoms and are supported in a gradual return to normal activities.
That may work in mild depression or burnout, but there is no evidence from all the many clinical trials of graded exercise therapy and CBT that people with ME/CFS improve significantly or recover better with these treatments than with standard medical care, or lack of it. Worse than useless, people with PEM are made sicker when they try to increase activity beyond their current limits. Just read the personal accounts on the S4ME petition and numerous patient surveys.
To suggest this here, as if it were a new and hopeful approach is wrong on every level and I think, criminally negligent.
Abstract said:
Finally, we call for a much more open and constructive dialogue about these conditions. This dialogue should include a wider range of views, including those of patients who have recovered from them.
Individual recovery anecdotes are notoriously unhelpful as it is not possible for individuals to know whether improvement or recovery occurred naturally by good fortune or has any relation to whatever treatment they were doing at the time.
What they are actually arguing for here is a return to an old outdated and disproved approach to ME/CFS - lumping it with different fatiguing conditions, denying the validity of PEM, and basing their arguments on anecdotes and very poor quality research.
I don't know why I've bothered to write all this. Forum members have heard it all before, those of us with ME/CFS have been faced by this sort of denialism of our experience many many times before. It's insulting, dangerous and unscientific. The authors should be ashamed.