ME/CFS Skeptic
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I wouldn't underestimate the competition.Looking forward to my 'best talking snow leopard' award from you guys!
I wouldn't underestimate the competition.Looking forward to my 'best talking snow leopard' award from you guys!
Per Fink you’re no Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Perhaps Aarhus is rather like the Gulag. Is there an archipelago nearby?
Perhaps Aarhus is rather like the Gulag. Is there an archipelago nearby?
This was exactly my response. The whole thing is perverse.Urm there isn't a puke emoji here. Sorry, I should make a more together post but right now all I can say is this prize makes me want to VOMIT. Puke. Sick. And so on.
I'm an angry old lady.
I reckon they just nicked the name to make it sound impressive.Is the prize awarded to PF the same prize?
That the prize was inspired by Alexander Solzhenitzyn -- oh the irony.
We particularly encourage any use of the term "civil courage." The term "Civil Courage Prize" is registered under United States Trademark Law, but we welcome its use by others along with the identifying registration symbol, Civil Courage Prize®.
I wouldn't underestimate the competition.
Article from Danish Medical Journal. I think it's inconceivable of the journalist to repeat the attacks on ME patients without covering anything about the patient's side of the story.
Ugeskriftet: Per Fink hædres for at stå fast, når fagligheten står for skud
google translation: Per Fink is honoured for standing firm, men the profession is attacked
The highly activist ME Association (ME = myalgic encephalomyelitis) has for years harassed and discredited Per Fink and the center in Aarhus, where the association and its supporters have filmed patients and demonstrated in front of the research clinic at Nørrebrogade with banners, megaphones and calls from the bottom drawer. They have been angered that chronic fatigue syndrome is not categorized as a somatic disorder, and they do not believe that neither cognitive therapy nor graduated training is widely used as treatment. Yes, that can be downright harmful.
...
- Could you have wished that voices other than your own rose in favor of professionalism when it comes to the treatment of functional disorders?
“Many colleagues have refrained from interfering in the debate, which I can understand with the harsh tone there can be. But yes, I have missed that more people signed up on the track. It would be nice not to be the only one. But I think it's about to turn. That more voice their agreement, 'says Per Fink.
...
“Diseases do not disappear because they are reclassified. It should be left to the professionals how a given disease should be understood and treated. Professionalism should always be at the forefront. As a stand we must constantly fight for, ”says Peter Vestergaard.
Translation of tweet from the Danish ME Association:
The ME Association is not behind harassment towards Per Fink. The ME Association has today sent an open letter to the Danish Medical Journal as a reply to Per Fink's statements in the Danish Medical Journal sept. 20th. Read the letter (tagging politicians)
The open letter is to chief editor Bo Hasseriis, the Danish Medical Journal.
It refutes the article's statement that the Danish ME Association has harassed Per Fink and reminds the editor that it's good practice to let the other part give their version. The ME Association does not believe that threats and insults increase understanding and is working for information and communication in a factual matter.
The ME Association can't take the responsibility for individual communication from patients or other citizens. They encourage members to keep a good tone.
The misinformed and discrediting statements from the article, which were unchallenged, are destroying for a patient organisation.
Further the ME Association would like to know if the Danish Medical Journal is a member of the Danish Press Council.
Here is the letter in full in Danish:
https://me-foreningen.dk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Åbent-brev-til-Ugeskrift-for-Læger_sept-2019.pdf
There's an ongoing debate about the article on the Facebook page to the Danish Medical Journal where the editor Bo Hasseriis has joined saying that one are welcome to disagree with Per Fink, but the article was about the prize Per Fink received by his colleagues, and not a research article. Therefore it is arbitrary and irrelevant to discuss the content of Per Fink's work in this connection.
[via facebook's translate option]
Bo Hasseriis You are welcome to disagree with per fink. But the article is about the price per fink got from his colleagues and is not a forskningsartikel. Therefore, it is both invalid and irrelevant to discuss the content of per finks's work in this connection. Your Bo Hasseriis, Editor-in-Chief, weekly for doctors
Do no harm is nothing but a cheap slogan when consistent testimonies of harm are dismissed as the whinings and ravings of lunatics. All because there is no official process to make such complaints, leaving no choice to otherwise express it.I agree @Esther12
Even more strange to suddenly start bashing on a patient organisation if it was supposed to be an article only about a price given by some colleagues.
But the Danish Medical Journal has now at least added a link to the open letter towards the end of the article.
It's added as a comment:
The Danish Medical Journal has received an open letter from the ME Association as a reaction on this article. The Danish Medical Journal has changed the wording in question from "The Danish ME Association" to "ME-patients and their supporters" (link to open letter).
The section in the article now goes as follows (google translated):
The highly activistic ME patients (ME = myalgic encephalomyelitis) have for years harassed and discredited Per Fink and the center in Aarhus. The patients and their supporters have filmed patients and demonstrated in front of the research clinic at Nørrebrogade with banners, megaphones and calls from the bottom drawer. They have been angered that chronic fatigue syndrome is not categorized as a somatic disorder, and they do not believe that neither cognitive therapy nor graduated training is widely used as treatment. Yes, that it can be downright harmful. [Text corrected - read comment at bottom of article. Ed.]