MSEsperanza
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Another review -- by Ruud Raijmakers, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands
https://www.qeios.com/read/W3Q720
"Without agreeing or disagreeing with the claims that were made, I tried to offer some counterclaims/queries to spark a scientific discussion."
Just picking out these two somewhat related ones:
"I like the paragraph on patient-initiated research and where it has brought the field. Are you at all afraid of a biased approach with these developments? Or do you feel the bias lies in the academic research that has been done up until then?
"Could the author elaborate on psychological intervention studies after the PACE trial that found benefit for some patients? Could it not be of use for some patients on the fatigue spectrum?
"Ref 17 does not scientifically support the strong claim that is made. "
Ref 17 is the Anomalies paper by White et al. criticizing the NICE guideline.
Raijmakers question about bias as an either-or issue I think may expose a lack of understanding of what bias is. Or maybe they just wanted to give you an easy opportunity to elucidate with some examples?
Reminded me of a couple of questions/ suggestions I had but wasn't able to write up in time.
Just one question now re ref 17: Why did you reference the Anomalies paper instead of its rebuttal by Barry et al?
I think in general some additional references and explanations would be helpful -- even if you think that's all too obvious for people you intended to get interested.
You could also name S4ME as a place where pwME/CFS engage in thorough discussions on research?
Anyway, it's good to see professionals with different background commenting on your article. To me that seems an exceptional chance to get some basic things across to people who haven't been aware of these before and are open to learn even if that includes reviewing some of their taken-for-granted assumptions.
Edit: Typo 1st line ('Preview' -> review)
https://www.qeios.com/read/W3Q720
"Without agreeing or disagreeing with the claims that were made, I tried to offer some counterclaims/queries to spark a scientific discussion."
Just picking out these two somewhat related ones:
"I like the paragraph on patient-initiated research and where it has brought the field. Are you at all afraid of a biased approach with these developments? Or do you feel the bias lies in the academic research that has been done up until then?
"Could the author elaborate on psychological intervention studies after the PACE trial that found benefit for some patients? Could it not be of use for some patients on the fatigue spectrum?
"Ref 17 does not scientifically support the strong claim that is made. "
Ref 17 is the Anomalies paper by White et al. criticizing the NICE guideline.
Raijmakers question about bias as an either-or issue I think may expose a lack of understanding of what bias is. Or maybe they just wanted to give you an easy opportunity to elucidate with some examples?
Reminded me of a couple of questions/ suggestions I had but wasn't able to write up in time.
Just one question now re ref 17: Why did you reference the Anomalies paper instead of its rebuttal by Barry et al?
I think in general some additional references and explanations would be helpful -- even if you think that's all too obvious for people you intended to get interested.
You could also name S4ME as a place where pwME/CFS engage in thorough discussions on research?
Anyway, it's good to see professionals with different background commenting on your article. To me that seems an exceptional chance to get some basic things across to people who haven't been aware of these before and are open to learn even if that includes reviewing some of their taken-for-granted assumptions.
Edit: Typo 1st line ('Preview' -> review)
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