The host spends much of his time on X dismissing anything ME related, shitting on advocates and charities, and winding up ME/CFS patients. He genuinely believes LC has nothing to do with ME/CFS and that ME folks are 'grifters' who have 'hijacked' LC. Others here will know him as 'Dave the LC Barbarian'. He seems to have recently deleted all this tweets and revamped his profile.The host of the program is vehemently opposed to equating ME/CFS with LC.
This Doc apparently treats patients with BF
There are no secrets around my credentials or education, nor are there apologies.
Despite my lack of formal training in this field, my work has the respect of leading professors, doctors and patients now in longterm remission.
I’ve also been an invite-only member and speaker at Stanford / OMF working group since 2021.
Your further attempts to smear me as an “anti-vaxer” won’t win any awards here either - I’ve worked with a significant number of people suffering from vaccine injuries after the last few years, also including both of my brothers and one of their wives. The literature is increasingly unfavourable around the rate of side effects and injuries.
Not to mention that Whitney has been slowly improving for years. The first improvement was attributed to Ativan and/or Abilify if I recall correctly.
My take on the BF protocol, with the amount of supplements and drugs you pump into your system its possible you hit one that improves your symptoms. Which is what Whitney did.
Haa anyone any ball park figure for rhe costs?Agree. Proliferation of such nonsense is a sad and preventable outcome of society’s failure to invest in ME and find actual explanations and treatments.
I feel bad for the people who will try this out of desperation to feel better and follow his uninformed, costly, and harmful advice.
I note that you start with a comment on the personality and stated motivation of the creator of the so called Born Free protocol, Joshua Leisk. Of course you are free to do so, it's your twitter thread, not a scientific study, so up to you, but seems to me to be trying to set the scene for your comment about BF in a more positive light than the actual content of the protocol warrants.
I note that you start with a comment on the personality and stated motivation of the creator of the so called Born Free protocol, Joshua Leisk. Of course you are free to do so, it's your twitter thread, not a scientific study, so up to you, but seems to me to be trying to set the scene for your comment about BF in a more positive light than the actual content of the protocol warrants.
Then you comment on changes in the health of one named individual and speculate about causes in changes to that person's health. That's not useful either, as it's second hand speculation based on anecdote, not a medical case study.
The rest of your twitter thread mentions your own experimentation and use of unnamed supplements. Again, not useful information for readers. And you make some comments about the BF protocol, presumably based on bits and pieces from your own unreplicated researches.
I'm afraid I can't see the point of your comment on the BF protocol.
Can you strip out the irelevant anecdotes and personal comments, and point to any particular evidence that is helpful for readers of this thread in deciding whether it's worth spending their time and energy examining what seems to me to be just another in a long string of protocols produced over decades by non scientists with outlandish claims of helping a wide range of conditions?
Just to let you know and also others, there is this thing called negative bias.
I think we can call things out for how they are: This is whole thing is simply quackery. That has nothing to do with negative bias.I sure will @Trish
Just to let you know and also others, there is this thing called negative bias. As I am rushing at the moment, I will post ASAP my reply.
Merry Christmas !