I wonder if they were hoping that withdrawing that one too would make this all seem like a low interest house cleaning exercise?
An "academic psychologist" on Twitter:
Edited to add: She also retweeted:
Yes - because the first quote (from the 2006 protocol) is actually about improvement.
It's because they didn't understand what they were doing, that they ended up making the recovery criteria *less strict* (>60) than the criteria they had already set for improvement (>70), which is why they then had to change the improvement criteria too (increase of 8 pts - which I've just noticed they say is 0.5 SD - oh what a mess!).
[ETA: and that's 0.5SD of the SF36 at baseline - which is already a highly selected population]
could someone screen save all these Clare Gerada tweets; they might disappear.
Her reply to Keith Geraghty is screen saved.could someone screen save all these Clare Gerada tweets; they might disappear.
Of course one significant source of pressure on doctors might be when they give badly flawed advice to ME patients, in the sincere belief they are right and doing their best, when in fact they have themselves have been hoodwinked by the heavily influential flawed research. In some cases they might be considered victims of it as well. Doctors these days must be hugely too busy to follow all the research, and have to rely on the integrity of medical researchers, and to trust the system.
Just to go back to the original topic: Have Cochrane issued any formal statement on this yet?
As far as I can see not. It seems the press release was not from them. The press release says Cochrane have taken the decision to withdraw, not that they have withdrawn.