I think this is what you are looking for : https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p09dw1l8
They really don't make it easy to find! I haven't looked for the particular segment of the program involving Pariante.
My concern would be that his support for, and his misrepresentation of patient's concerns about, CBT for ME would suggest that he would be open to interpreting any biomedical results that he might find into that framework. The results of his work might prove to be useful; his interpretation of it, possibly not so much.I don't think we learned much. As I said to David Tuller yesterday—and others may disagree, but this is my personal opinion—I think there's enough biomedicine in Pariante's work for it to be taken seriously. Any work on brain inflammation and central fatigue may prove important to ME/CFS, even if to just a subset of patients. I certainly don't lump him in with the likes of Chalder and Crawley, who are not serious scientists.
There was an interview/story with Helland from the Norwegian Competence Center, where she said something along the lines of "Some people only hear psychosocial when we talk about the biospychosocial approach". I could have given her the benefit of the doubt that she also included healthcare workers in this, but then she went to say that we now know that illness is influenced by many factors, and we must treat it holistically or something similar. IE, the healthcare workers know what this means, but patients misunderstand.Pariante 2:19 to 2:39
More or less repeats his arguments from the article.
Goes on and on about personalised treatment/ help with management. pacing, pushing at your limits gently etc etc. Seems to think that the NHS clinics are getting it right with their usual mix of therapists to provide this personalised help.
He argues that it's important for psychosocial approaches to be included in all research studies of Long Covid.
He also made what to me seems a very superficial statement that as far as the body and brain are concerned psychological stressors and infections have exactly the same effect on the body and brain - ie stimulating the immune system, so from that he seems to deduce that ME/CFS and Long Covid can be treated by psychosocial treatments.
The interviewer says her mother has ME/CFS and has experienced clinicians and friends saying it's all in her mind. Pariante tried to dismiss this as belief from over 50 years ago. He didn't acknowledge that it's still going on.
The interviewer was very respectful and didn't challenge him at all.
He's right that psychological stress isn't good for ME/CFS, as it isn't good for many other conditions. Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't think that anyone has challenged the idea that psychological stress can be bad for ME.
The problem is this ambiguity with whether that's treated as a central perpetuating mechanism of ME or whether it's just something seen as a factor as it is in many other conditions, including physical ones. He isn't making that clear, isn't talking about evidence for what he's saying, and keeps talking about various analogies and comparisons which basically amount to truisms.
It's a bit of a dogs breakfast, which is frustrating, because although he seems like a nice and respectful guy, that all makes it hard to have a good dialogue with him.
He seems to straddle both. But he needs to pick a horse and soon because everyone still clinging to the wrong horse will find themselves to be entirely irrelevant before they get a chance to get back in the barn.I don't think we learned much. As I said to David Tuller yesterday—and others may disagree, but this is my personal opinion—I think there's enough biomedicine and biology in Pariante's work for it to be taken seriously. Any work on brain inflammation and central fatigue may prove important to ME/CFS, even if to just a subset of patients. I certainly don't lump him in with the likes of Chalder and Crawley, who are not serious scientists.
And that disqualifies him as a serious person. Being unable to acknowledge reality always should be.The interviewer says her mother has ME/CFS and has experienced clinicians and friends saying it's all in her mind. Pariante tried to dismiss this as belief from over 50 years ago. He didn't acknowledge that it's still going on.
but he (Pariante) is very tight with SW and a lot of his work is on depression. All of the bPS group are just dying for something that 'proves' the correlation between ME and depression.I don't think we learned much. As I said to David Tuller yesterday—and others may disagree, but this is my personal opinion—I think there's enough biomedicine and biology in Pariante's work for it to be taken seriously. Any work on brain inflammation and central fatigue may prove important to ME/CFS, even if to just a subset of patients. I certainly don't lump him in with the likes of Chalder and Crawley, who are not serious scientists.
but he (Pariante) is very tight with SW and a lot of his work is on depression. All of the bPS group are just dying for something that 'proves' the correlation between ME and depression.
psychological stressors and infections have exactly the same effect on the body and brain - ie stimulating the immune system