Thank you @Jonathan EdwardsFantastic letter @Jonathan Edwards
Thank you @Jonathan EdwardsFantastic letter @Jonathan Edwards
http://www.virology.ws/2019/06/03/t...nformation-request-to-bristol-about-lp-study/Trial By Error: A Freedom of Information Request to Bristol About LP Study
On Friday, I sent the following request to the University of Bristol. I cc-d Sue Paterson, the director of legal services. I received an automatic reply alerting me that Bristol was behind in responding to FOI requests, meaning that a response is unlikely within the mandated period of twenty working days.
One point of this request is to try to find out if Bristol took any action when it learned of the concerns about the conduct and reporting of the Lightning Process study. The seriousness of the documented ethical and methodological violations should have alarmed anyone at Bristol who found out about them.
Unresponsiveness in the face of obvious child abuse is a very bad look.
At what stage does one bring to the attention of the Chairman of the board of Directors the potential for reputational damage to the brand?
The strategy seems to be hoping it goes away. It works in politics. Not so much in science.Excellent letters @Jonathan Edwards and @dave30th.
I really am interested to hear how UoB might seek to still justify endorsing a treatment for children which they are instructed to remain silent about, and which there are no published details of. Continuing support after this has be so clearly pointed out to them would be the final nail in their reputational coffin I would have thought.
Perhaps the most worrying aspect is that we are told that Lightning Process subjects are told to ‘keep secret’ information about treatment and progress. ‘Keeping secrets’ is a central red flag in safeguarding of children.
Do we know if that was a part of SMILE?
She said this about herself but presumably the person (I won’t say therapist don’t want to dignify them with that title) delivering the LP element expected it to work and participants likewise- it was being given under auspices of NHS which would have given credibility to patients.An odd thought occurred to me in relation to SMILE, which I shall post here since the thread is active.
Dr Crawley said she was not expecting the Lightning Process to work. So an apparent beneficial effect ought not to be due to 'expectation bias'. I think things in reality are more complicated, but it is intriguing.
yes but Prof Crawley says a lot of things, and her acting/presentation skills have improved over the years.Dr Crawley said she was not expecting the Lightning Process to work
I don't think so. It was in the paper Chalder published on patients' experiences with LP: "Several of the participants highlighted the secrecy aspect as unhelpful and difficult, resulting in prejudice and lack of understanding from people around them."It's possible that the reports of 'secrecy' we've had were a result of just a few LP therapists. Who knows?
It was in the paper Chalder published on patients' experiences
She said this about herself but presumably the person (I won’t say therapist don’t want to dignify them with that title) delivering the LP element expected it to work and participants likewise-
And who can ever take what EC says at face value, or whether it was said just for rhetorical effect so it sounded all the more impressive that LP (supposedly) did work. When it comes to sleight of word and presentation, I would not take anything for granted.She said this about herself but presumably the person (I won’t say therapist don’t want to dignify them with that title) delivering the LP element expected it to work and participants likewise- it was being given under auspices of NHS which would have given credibility to patients.
Advertising fluff. "I never thought another washing powder would get my clothes even whiter ..." If you're selling something it's common practice to express amazement along the lines of "I never would have believed it ..."Dr Crawley said she was not expecting the Lightning Process to work.