Long covid patients really don't have a clue.omg.
Cue flashbacks to absolutely the worst sessions I've ever had! I had no idea. And neither do they, it seems.![]()
Perhaps someone should provide them with a link to some of this info .
Long covid patients really don't have a clue.omg.
Cue flashbacks to absolutely the worst sessions I've ever had! I had no idea. And neither do they, it seems.![]()
I suspect dates for trials are usually quoted as the date they were published, in this case 2011, rather than the date they were started (2005).EDIT - Thanks for the heads up; found this via Google search:
"PACE trial started on 18 March 2005" https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1359105317703785
Ah, fair point. I was thinking of the publication date.EDIT - Thanks for the heads up; found this via Google search:
"PACE trial started on 18 March 2005" https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1359105317703785
People should read this imo. Amongst the pretentious narrative are a deferential belief in psychosomatic illness, a strong dilineation between the mind and body and claim the pyschotherapy has never hurt anyone along with a discussion of transference and some strange "examples" of psychosomatic illness. It's frankly bizarre.
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https://www.researchgate.net/publication/304886557_Personal_View
This is definitely Paul A Garner, he was in Papa New Guinea at the same time, and even starts another paper in the same way he does this one. This account confirms he wrote the original personal paper as he describes it verbatim as a "psychology scheme" over 18-months at UCH. Naturally, the reference to transference has returned.
What struck me was how important and core this experience was to him, especially given in the context of his role now. He says he had no training in tropical disease and then quickly goes on to say...
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I think this all sheds light on why in the papers on Tropical Disease, Paul is on non-stop about evidence based medicine, but why psychotherapy and psychosomatism are a blind spot to him,
Something he risked with his BBC appearance because he was too blind to the lack of scientific method in his own anecdote.
By the next day I could see very clearly that the role thing was a fraud and an insult to patients. I decided not to do any further sessions. The patient seemed to agree.
Thanks for digging out those articles dreampop. Very illuminating.People should read this imo.
No patient has ever been made worse by [psycho]therapy.
my only real experience of psychotherapy relates to two families I know socially. The first was destroyed completely by the process, with members scattering apart and two eventual suicides. The second led to estrangement that caused untold misery for other members of the family with no final reconciliation.
Apart from that my only real experience of psychotherapy relates to two families I know socially. The first was destroyed completely by the process, with members scattering apart and two eventual suicides. The second led to estrangement that caused untold misery for other members of the family with no final reconciliation.
I have found psychotherapy to be beneficial, but whether it's because I want to believe that or it really was, who knows? If it helped, I don't know if it was because of "therapy" or just because I met with kind, smart people who helped provide me with some insight into why I was doing this or that. .
I'm willing to bet that the scientific studies that purport to show benefit from psychotherapy are as poor quality as those on CBT and GET in ME/CFS. Given his views on psychotherapy, perhaps it's not surprising Garner claims to be impressed by Cochrane's GET review.
Some time ago Coyne wrote an interesting post about a meta-analysis which showed that long term psychotherapy was no better than placebo. Maybe this is it.
Garner wrote to me in July saying that he thought the GET review was "shite"
The Cochrane review of exercise treatment for chronic fatigue is very well done
I guess we should be careful making assumptions about someone's views now based on an article they wrote 40 years ago as a medical student. People can change. Though recent evidence suggests not in this case.
Jo, I have to say these are really rather extreme examples!
I have found psychotherapy to be beneficial, but whether it's because I want to believe that or it really was, who knows? If it helped, I don't know if it was because of "therapy" or just because I met with kind, smart people who helped provide me with some insight into why I was doing this or that. .