https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/call-for-review-of-flawed-me-research-in-lancet-letter-l75rvcprh - Free sign-up required to read full article.More than a hundred academics have joined ten MPs and scores of patient groups from around the world to sign an open letter calling for The Lancet to reanalyse a study into treatment for myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME).
The letter follows a debate in parliament in which one MP said that the study, which is used to set NHS guidelines, “will go down as one of the biggest medical scandals of the 21st century”. The authors of the research paper stood by their findings and said that the letter represented a campaign to discredit solid research and force the retraction of papers simply because patients disagreed with their findings.
yeah, I dislike that phrase. The PACE authors don't think that anyway. They genuinely believe people have bad symptoms. They have just insisted the symptoms come from deconditioning, not an underlying organic illness.I wish we could get people in the media to not focus on the 'all in the mind' stuff
Yes, Tom Whipple deserves credit for getting it into the paper.Thanks a lot to Whipple
Short article in online version of The Times today reporting on the letter to the Lancet. Written by Tom Whipple- that the Lancet declined to comment.
Thanks - good news!
Funny that the Lancet declined to comment, and that this is coming as there's renewed attention on the fallout from their MMR/Wakfield paper.
Here's the link: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/call-for-review-of-flawed-me-research-in-lancet-letter-l75rvcprh
Includes reference to the Monaghan quote:
"The letter follows a debate in parliament in which one MP said that the study, which is used to set NHS guidelines, “will go down as one of the biggest medical scandals of the 21st century”. The authors of the research paper stood by their findings and said that the letter represented a campaign to discredit solid research and force the retraction of papers simply because patients disagreed with their findings."
I wish we could get people in the media to not focus on the 'all in the mind' stuff, which is such a distraction from the most important issues:
"The £5 million publicly funded trial was published in The Lancet and has informed advice on treating people with ME in the NHS and abroad, but is controversial among ME sufferers. Some claim that its advice perpetuates an idea that the disease, which causes debilitating disability, is all in the mind."
Thanks a lot to Whipple, and especially Tuller.
Yes but in my simple head with ME they are saying that the difference between us and the people who recover from the nasty virus or whatever triggers it is we become deconditioned because of our unhelpful beliefs and behaviours. Which they attempt to treat by changing our beliefs and behaviours. That’s the same as saying if your head was right you wouldn’t have these physical issues.yeah, I dislike that phrase. The PACE authors don't think that anyway. They genuinely believe people have bad symptoms. They have just insisted the symptoms come from deconditioning, not an underlying organic illness.
To propose a hypothesis of deconditioning as cause for ME, well that is no other than an insult to intellect.
The data undoubtedly show that deconditioning (a vicious spiral of progressively reduced physical fitness) plays some part in the manifestations of the disorder, as reflected by the higher heart rates at rest and the higher heart rates and whole-blood lactate levels at submaximal exertion. However, deconditioning by itself is not sufficient to explain the features of the disorder, because CFS patients describe and display marked fluctuation in their exercise capacity during the course of their illness.
Just been reading the comments; ugh.
It seems that the moderators are deleting comments with references (or it might just be links) to scientific evidence:
"Jaquie Wilson:
Shall I bombard you with robust, biological research which proves ME is biological? Problem is, my comments keep disappearing, so I must be upsetting someone..."
The Lancet legacy: Measles makes a comeback.
Just learned 41,000 Europeans have measles, just so far this year - and they are attributing it to The Lancet publishing that 'vaccine causes autism' paper from 1998.
https://globalnews.ca/news/4397490/measles-europe/
The Lancet legacy: Measles makes a comeback.
Just learned 41,000 Europeans have measles, just so far this year - and they are attributing it to The Lancet publishing that 'vaccine causes autism' paper from 1998.
https://globalnews.ca/news/4397490/measles-europe/
@dave30th I wonder if this presents an opportunity for you to get the letter (or an abbreviated version) published in the Times as a Letter to the Editor?
As they always do, in any meaningful way.that the Lancet declined to comment
Yes, but they do believe that PwME's mindset blocks them from "realising" they can improve/recover from their physical condition by exercising their way out of it, if only the PwME believed they could do so. By stating someone's condition is only perpetuated by having the wrong thoughts/mindset to escape it, that is not very far away at all from presenting the problem, colloquially, as all in the mind.yeah, I dislike that phrase. The PACE authors don't think that anyway. They genuinely believe people have bad symptoms. They have just insisted the symptoms come from deconditioning, not an underlying organic illness.
Agree that getting more biomedical research, however that can be achieved, is the answer, otherwise will likely have to fight all sorts of problems indefinitely (plus of course the hope it [more research] might lead to treatments).I thought this same journalist had covered this story a while back. If the Lancet are just going to sit on their hands as long as they can and completely get away with it I think it shows why we need a group like #MEAction who might come up with innovative ways to get this boil lanced.
As someone on Facebook says, whilst this is obviously delaying progress we should as a community be pushing for fundamentally more research of the sums invested in PACE & FINE by the MRC / NIHR. If the biomedical research progressed enough to prove our abnormalities and get effective treatments whatever these psychological brigade said wouldn’t matter or would in effect be disproven. The problem has been the PACE narrative plus lack of research , obviously interlinked, but we haven’t fought for the latter AFAIC past ten years.