Invisible Illness A History, from Hysteria to Long Covid, 2026, Mendenhall (book)

The author Emily Mendenhall has today published more background information on Wessley's threats and more:

Bluesky Blowup
How the ME/CFS patient community is reading Invisible Illness
While one reviewer loved the piece and suggested publication, the other one (Wessely) did not. He demanded it be rejected and threatened to sue the journal for defamation.

It was at that point that I spoke with my lawyer, publisher, and trusted colleagues and decided to withdraw the article from the journal. I think the journal editors had been concerned about the threats and were relieved I pulled it. However, at the same time, this was moments before the book went to press. I felt threatened and concerned that the book would be compromised so, after discussion with my editor, I pulled my most pointed critiques of his research as well as the media around the PACE Trials from the book. I still do feel the book provides an important story, and that the PACE Trials are well represented, even though my most pointed critiques were removed.
if people ever needed evidence of how the truth is obscured and that those doing the manipulating are not 'ME militant patients'.
 


Oh dear. Comes across as defensive but not very precise. Making quotes of the criticisms that she is defending herself against would have been more helpful, (Edit) rather than her own *interpretation* of the criticisms.

The 'Long Covid Advocacy' Blog replies underneath Emily Mendenhall's new blogpost 'Bluesky Blowup' https://emilymendenhall.substack.com/p/bluesky-blowup?r=58lot&triedRedirect=true



And here is the original response to 'From Hysteria to Long Covid' which helpfully includes quotes to illustrate the critique. Response by Dr Elke Hausmann on the 'Long Covid Advocacy' Blog.

'These are not verifiable conditions'

'Thoughts of Emily Mendenhall's new book 'Invisible Illness: a history from hysteria to Long Covid' - by Dr Elke Hausmann'


'We are pleased to welcome Dr Elke Hausmann as a guest writer and friend of Long Covid Advocacy. In this article she delves into the details and controversies of Emily Mendenhall’s new book ‘Invisible Illnesses’ with precision and acuity - providing a much needed analysis for the community.'


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This is the most shocking part of Emily Mildenhall's article:
https://emilymendenhall.substack.com/p/bluesky-blowup?r=58lot&triedRedirect=true
At the same time, I found that this cultural history was largely absent from the anthropological discourse and I wanted to publish a piece of it in an academic journal so that academics might engage in this history intellectually. The article I put together wove together the origins of the CFS diagnostic with the medical misogyny of the PACE Trials that I describe in chapter 2 of Invisible Illnessand described how the PACE Trials were debunked. I very clearly called out Simon Wessely in the article.

The article was submitted and a lovely (but very junior) editor handled the article and sent it to Wessely himself. I received a 17 page retort from him where he self-identified himself as the reviewer. I must note that I never personally reached out to him in part because he was such a contentious actor throughout my patient interviews and I felt he had very extensively published his viewpoints in his own words already. However, I did interview some of his close colleagues and friends. Much of what I cited about him was based on his own words and things written about what happened in the 1990s and early 2000s. Some of the critiques, however, we from extensive discussions with ME activists.

While one reviewer loved the piece and suggested publication, the other one (Wessely) did not. He demanded it be rejected and threatened to sue the journal for defamation. Instead, the journal said I could address his comments and they would not send the article back to him (although, they’d already been in contact with their legal department). I found his feedback very interesting in part because he wrote so freely, emotionally, and extensively. I spent a great deal of time responding to his 17 page critique and very thoughtfully addressed his comments. In my revised draft, I added more of Tuller’s critiques of the PACE Trials themselves (that were in the book but not the journal article), while also managing his perspective about what the PACE Trial researchers found, revised, and did in a way that I found was appropriate.

Unfortunately, a new editor sent it back to Wessely. While a separate new reviewer argued that his response to the first draft was itself an interesting cultural artifact in itself, and provided constructive criticism for final edits, Wessely got even more upset. It was at that point that I spoke with my lawyer, publisher, and trusted colleagues and decided to withdraw the article from the journal. I think the journal editors had been concerned about the threats and were relieved I pulled it. However, at the same time, this was moments before the book went to press. I felt threatened and concerned that the book would be compromised so, after discussion with my editor, I pulled my most pointed critiques of his research as well as the media around the PACE Trials from the book. I still do feel the book provides an important story, and that the PACE Trials are well represented, even though my most pointed critiques were removed.
 
I wonder whether an FOI to Wessely's university would enable someone to access his 17 page 'review'.


Hmm. Good idea. Unlikely to be successful but worth trying.

When Wessely sent the 2006 Gibson Inquiry committee a 20 page letter, the letter's contents were not allowed to be considered as written evidence to the Inquiry, were never made public, and Prof Wessely did not give oral evidence either. But nevertheless some of the content of his 20 page letter (which no one was allowed to read except the Gibson Inquiry committee, or possibly just Ian Gibson) was put into the Inquiry Report, to the absolute detriment of the patients.

Wessely does not appear to have to abide by the rules that bind everyone else. Someone always gives way to him.

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Long COVID Advocacy substack has a post by a guest writer, Dr Elke Hausmann (I don't know anything about them): https://longcovidadvocacy.substack.com/p/these-are-not-verifiable-conditions

Looks like Elke tried to write a balanced post and started with positives but ran out of them quickly.
Previous articles by Hausmann can be found in this thread
 
Sounds like the lawyers and publishers need to learn that there is a difference between being sued and being sued successfully. It can only be defamation if what is being said is untrue.
It can bankrupt you defending the claim - that’s the real threat. It’s famously expensive, a notoriously complex area of law and therefore frequently very lengthy.
The truth is an absolute defence to defamation, but you still have to spend years and money arguing. It doesn’t mean you will win or it will be thrown out because what you said is true.
 
Let me be clear: I take great care to argue against psychologizing the condition, which is why I drew heavily on scholars such as Elizabeth Wilson and Elizabeth Barnes and scientists like Mike VanElzakker
I’m a big fan of Mike VanElzakker now but in his first paper, he criticises advocates critical of CBT and GET in a very frustrating way over a number of pages as I recall.

Chronic fatigue syndrome from vagus nerve infection: a psychoneuroimmunological hypothesis​

Michael B VanElzakker. Med Hypotheses. 2013 Sep.

A full copy can be read here:
 
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It can bankrupt you defending the claim - that’s the real threat. It’s famously expensive, a notoriously complex area of law and therefore frequently very lengthy.
The truth is an absolute defence to defamation, but you still have to spend years and money arguing. It doesn’t mean you will win or it will be thrown out because what you said is true.
Wow, I googled it and found one news article saying that cost in UK might be 100 times higher than elsewhere in Europe. Please excuse my ignorance then!

Although that means that it would be equally expensive for Wessely, and I can’t find any mention of him actually going through with one.
 
I am just getting up to speed. I haven't been online or posted since right after New Year's because of a fall in which I bruised my ribs. I was slowly going to try to get back to working this week. How awful. I am not surprised at these hardball tactics. I got various vague legal threats from these people over the years, but nothing so direct.
 
Although that means that it would be equally expensive for Wessely, and I can’t find any mention of him actually going through with one.
He has contacts and friends. QMUL was willing to bankroll I think it was atleast 100k probably much more to prevent the release of PACE data. I’m quite sure he was involved in that.

Edit: Changed from “his university” to the uni name since upon second thought im not actually sure it was his.
 
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I am just getting up to speed. I haven't been online or posted since right after New Year's because of a fall in which I bruised my ribs. I was slowly going to try to get back to working this week. How awful. I am not surprised at these hardball tactics. I got various vague legal threats from these people over the years, but nothing so direct.
Sorry to hear that. I hope the pain isn’t too bad! :hug:
 
I am just getting up to speed. I haven't been online or posted since right after New Year's because of a fall in which I bruised my ribs. I was slowly going to try to get back to working this week. How awful. I am not surprised at these hardball tactics. I got various vague legal threats from these people over the years, but nothing so direct.
:hug::hug: very gentle ones.

Have you ever felt the need to make changes in a text because of those threats?
 
Sounds like the lawyers and publishers need to learn that there is a difference between being sued and being sued successfully. It can only be defamation if what is being said is untrue.
UK defamation laws are super weird and basically tuned for precisely this kind of abuse of power, but here this also involves an academic journal and so would fall squarely under academic freedom as a protection. No doubt they would have extended him some special right of retort, but likely he didn't want any of this to be public. It's actually an affront to science, to professionalism and all that is good that they caved like cowards.
 
this also involves an academic journal and so would fall squarely under academic freedom as a protection
This government page says that peer reviewed acadmic publishing is protected in the defamation act of 2013.
 
I'm puzzled by the author's repeated use of PACE trials' as if there were more than one. This suggests to me a lack of knowledge that is concerning in someone writing on the subject.

It's surely possible to get around defamation problems with Wessely by quoting his own words provided the context is clear so he can't accuse her of quoting him out of context. He's written enough pretty damning opinions over the years in still available publications.
 
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