She is. I was being ladylike..which isn't quite how I responded in real life! I won't type what I did say but by heck she is a diamond. Imo the Government rep was filibustering, trying to tone down the very palpable anger amongst many of the MPs in attendance.She's bloody briliant
Absolutely... there was no confusion over how fraudulent the PACE Trial actually is.All told though I thought Carol Monaghan was totally amazing! She didn't "miss and hit the wall" as the saying goes. Right to the point from the very beginning.
Personally I thought it perhaps went as well as it could possibly go. From my naturally biased viewpoint, Carol seemed very compelling and got lots of what we might consider key points across, four or five other MPs spoke up telling supportive stories that their constituents had told them, and there was a call by another MP for a longer fuller debate in the House of Commons. I'll remain cautious in my optimism but it looked like there was some momentum building.Just caught the end but seemed to be quite reasonable. They seemed to gloss over COI but I think the door may be ajar for some evidence to be presented?
Seven years? If only...23 years this year.
Is there a recording of the debate anywhere? Very disappointed to miss it but my worsening sleep schedule put me to sleep at 10 to 7 this morning, and it was over when I woke.
Your reports sound good......I could do with some good news.
Personally I thought it perhaps went as well as it could possibly go. From my naturally biased viewpoint, Carol seemed very compelling and got lots of what we might consider key points across, four or five other MPs spoke up telling supportive stories that their constituents had told them, and there was a call by another MP for a longer fuller debate in the House of Commons. I'll remain cautious in my optimism but it looked like there was some momentum building.
Could it be this? Due to end Sep this year.Anyone know what MRC-funded study into brain function and ME/CFS symptoms, the Minister was referring to?
http://gtr.rcuk.ac.uk/projects?ref=MR/M02363X/1A Unified Mechanism for Functional Neurological Symptoms
With this work, we want to test a new theory for how functional symptoms can arise from the brain. One of the difficulties in understanding functional symptoms is that the brain and the rest of the nervous system appears to be intact, despite severe symptoms. Indeed in patients with some types of symptoms, for example people with limb weakness, it is possible to demonstrate on examination that the apparently weak limb can generate normal power, even though the patient cannot get this to happen him or herself. We believe it is vitally important for research and development of better diagnosis and treatment for us to understand how functional symptoms are produced by the brain.
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Chronic fatigue syndrome is a disabling condition characterised by persistent fatigue in the absence of a clear medical cause. We believe that fatigue in chronic fatigue syndrome may occur because of abnormal activation of a network of structures in the brain that are usually involved in signalling the presence of infection and inflammation in the body and which give rise to a common set of symptoms experienced by everyone (and indeed across species) when infection or inflammation occur (known as the "sickness response"). This sickness response is usually short-lived, but we believe that the system could be abnormally activated in people with chronic fatigue syndrome in the absence of any ongoing infection or inflammation in the body.