Because the paper made unwarranted causal statements and glossed over the huge number of drop-outs and questionnaire non-responders, among other methodological and ethical issues, Professor Brian Hughes and I co-wrote a response and submitted it formally to the journal two weeks ago through the online editorial manager.
As of this morning, the commentary was still awaiting administrative action, so Professor Hughes wrote directly to the journal editor. As he was in the process of posting the commentary to a pre-print site, he received a brief note from the editor stating the following: “Thank you for submitting your article to the JRSM. I read it with interest but I am afraid that I am unable to offer publication on this occasion. I am sorry to disappoint and wish you luck elsewhere.”
So I have posted it below. And here’s
the version on the pre-print site. We will also send it to members of the NICE committee in case this flawed study gets raised in discussion by CBT proponents to support their position. It would be nice to find a journal willing to publish such a critique, but at least rejection no longer presents an obstacle to making something public.