Arnie Pye
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
This paper/article appeared in the journal "Progress in Cardiovascular Diseases".
It isn't related to ME but so much of what is described reminds me of some of the experiences of writers and researchers on the subject of ME - people like David Tuller ( @dave30th ) and Keith Geraghty ( sorry, couldn't remember or find his member name).
Title : The obesity wars and the education of a researcher: A personal account
Author : Katherine M. Flegel
Link : https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0033062021000670
I also liked this sentence :
and I wondered if the reactions to ME/CFS research could be described as a partisan issue as well? But it might not fit.
It isn't related to ME but so much of what is described reminds me of some of the experiences of writers and researchers on the subject of ME - people like David Tuller ( @dave30th ) and Keith Geraghty ( sorry, couldn't remember or find his member name).
Title : The obesity wars and the education of a researcher: A personal account
Author : Katherine M. Flegel
Link : https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0033062021000670
Attacks on our paper continued and appeared in some unexpected places. A 2007 story appeared in Scientific American21 by a leading health journalist who had never even contacted the CDC press office or spoken to me but nonetheless asserted that our conclusions were “probably wrong,” quoting two PSPH faculty at length. “It's complete nonsense, and it's obviously complete nonsense, and it's very easy to explain why some people have gone astray,” said one.
In the same year, a post-doc at PSPH posted the following on a blog: “Numbers from Flegal's paper had been subsequently RETRACTED [sic] by the CDC, and she has subsequently been demoted at the CDC for writing the erroneous paper.” Every single one of these statements was false. CDC had not retracted our findings, and I had not been demoted. In fact, our paper had received CDC's highest science award, the Shepard award, in 2006. After I called the post-doc to point out his errors, he apologized and deleted the post. He was unable or unwilling to tell me where he had gotten his misinformation, although he assured me it was not from anyone at PSPH.
A 2007 article22 from a different PSPH group claimed falsely that CDC had “recanted” our 2005 article. I was impressed that this unreferenced statement could have been written to begin with and then could get through reviewers, editors and copy editors without anyone asking for clarification or evidence. At our request and after some negotiations, the authors reluctantly published an erratum23.
Around the same time, some unusual statements were anonymously inserted in the Wikipedia entry on “overweight.” These statements asserted with no references that our article had been “widely discredited and regarded as fatally flawed by researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School, American Cancer Society, and even the CDC agency itself, which has backtracked on the findings from the Flegal report.” This was part of what appeared to be an ongoing campaign to present our article incorrectly as having been repudiated by reputable sources.
I also liked this sentence :
It took me far too long to understand that our findings were being treated by some as a partisan issue rather than as a topic of scientific discussion.
and I wondered if the reactions to ME/CFS research could be described as a partisan issue as well? But it might not fit.