And boy, how those original BPS 'researchers' must be smarting at this slap in the face for them.
I was thinking more a slice of tripeProper length of wet haddock, isn't it!![]()
Proper length of wet haddock, isn't it!![]()
Fishy tripe ... yep, that sounds about right.I was thinking more a slice of tripe![]()
You can be 100% certain it would not have happened without the new guideline coming to fruition. I wonder how this sits with Sir SW, given how his rise to power and influence has likely relied so much on his endorsements of the old CFS/ME religion-based 'science', and very likely his helping to push cost saving treatments.I can’t see this as anything but positive, has there ever been an official meeting between the Health Secretary and researchers looking at the biology of ME. Or even a junior minister for that matter.
couldn’t even have envisaged this a couple of years ago
And it would have not happened at all without the years of behind the scenes efforts by our charities - I think that should be recognised as well.You can be 100% certain it would not have happened without the new guideline coming to fruition. I wonder how this sits with Sir SW, given how his rise to power and influence has likely relied so much on his endorsements of the old CFS/ME religion-based 'science', and very likely his helping to push cost saving treatments.
Fully agree.And it would have not happened at all without the years of behind the scenes efforts by our charities - I think that should be recognised as well.
My default response to anything said by the current UK government is likely to contravene community standards, however it is very positive that the right noises are being made from the very top.
This coming so soon after the publication of the new NICE guidelines will hopefully encourage the momentum to continue in the right direction.
"There’s been a real lack of research over many years."
Hopefully he means research that is likely to tell us something not the stuff which has often been funded.
I think that things like this can have indirect but equally important implications. It helps get the important message out that things have changed, and there is no going back. Hopefully the beneficial effects of the new guideline (this being just one) will cascade out.Well I hope, that following the publication of guidelines rejecting GET and curative CBT and following a meeting with supporters of biomedical researcher, the sentences “We need to do more on ME/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. There’s been a real lack of research over many years.” are intended as an inditement of the flawed BPS research that has dominated the last couple of decades and the failure to support biomedical research.
Though as said, there is a large gap between words and action, but the right words are at least taking us a little forward.
Well I hope, that following the publication of guidelines rejecting GET and curative CBT and following a meeting with supporters of biomedical researcher, the sentences “We need to do more on ME/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. There’s been a real lack of research over many years.” are intended as an inditement of the flawed BPS research that has dominated the last couple of decades and the failure to support biomedical research.
Though as said, there is a large gap between words and action, but the right words are at least taking us a little forward.
"There’s been a real lack of research over many years.”
That's how I read it as a dyslexic person - I can only read sentences in a way that make sense to me...Should be read as:
"There’s been a lack of real research over many years.”