But she’s promoting a product that she has direct monetary ties to.
Why is the Lightning Process more of a commercial product than someone offering CBT and getting paid for it? The ICJME form says that "related" to the manuscript means that a third party is somehow profiting. Is there a 3rd party profiting from Landmark offering LP therapy? The assumption here seems to be that all providers are employed by someone, so if they're taking money from patients, that's a conflict. But in the U.S. we have a lot of private practitioners who are not on a salary and get paid directly by patients, whether through their insurance or out-of-pocket. That's especially true when it comes to psychotherapeutic interventions.
Besides that, even if you work for, say, a hospital and are the expert in some intervention there, and you're on salary but it depends on you doing that intervention well, are you required to disclose that that's your job if you research it, even though your income depends on it? I don't think so.
On the other hand, I agree that anyone providing expert testimony for outside parties, like Flottorp, should be required to disclose that.
So my gut here says that, no matter how much with think LP is fraudulent or absurd or whatever, the fact that she earns money doing that does not seem like sufficient reason to demand a COI disclosure if it is not demanded of other clinicians. If she's receiving licensing fees from other practitioners, so there are third parties involved, then that would be a different situation. That's a different commercial interest from just providing the LP herself to clients. Do we know if that's the case?
I could be wrong. So far, the arguments offered have not convinced me!
