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  1. Jonathan Edwards

    Preprint Patient objectification in psychiatry, 2026, Sakakibara

    "physicians may regard patients’ complaints with suspicion, sometimes assuming fabrication or exaggeration (Blease et al. 2017; Buchman et al. 2017). Yet, as the adage “absence of evidence is not evidence of absence” reminds us, equating the absence of objective findings with the dismissal of...
  2. Jonathan Edwards

    Preprint Patient objectification in psychiatry, 2026, Sakakibara

    Yes, but that applies to all medicine maybe. A good psychiatrist will make fair decisions about things like this. I have seen it in action and the way it can be lifesaving. A bad psychiatrist will be lazy and get things wrong. Same for physicians. But the whole narrative here seems to me very...
  3. Jonathan Edwards

    The Concept of ME/CFS

    Maybe mine were a bit earlier too. I forget. But they did seem to appear overnight. What I find reassuring is that there don't seem to be many more of them 5-10 years later. It's very odd. Definitely not a linear progression.
  4. Jonathan Edwards

    Open Norway: Plasma cell aimed treatment with daratumumab in ME/CFS (ResetME) - Haukeland University Hospital

    I would endorse those reservations. Jo Cambridge got involved in NK cell counts and assays early on and developed an ingrained scepticism for both the data and the interpretation. The low and high NK counts in the Dara pilot correlating with response did seem to me pretty remarkable - enough for...
  5. Jonathan Edwards

    The Concept of ME/CFS

    I don't think this is new. We have always known that certain aging phenomena occur quite suddenly in certain decades. Loss of eye lens accommodation occurs around 40. Cataract formation around 80, unless there are accelerating factors. The Heberden's nodes of 'generalised osteoarthropathy appear...
  6. Jonathan Edwards

    Open Norway: Plasma cell aimed treatment with daratumumab in ME/CFS (ResetME) - Haukeland University Hospital

    I shouldn't think so. Changes in immunity with aging are very fashionable - everyone has set up departments of aging immunity but to be honest I have never noticed it make much difference. A few people, particularly those with diabetes seem to lose immunity to common infections like Staph...
  7. Jonathan Edwards

    Daratumumab in severe Evans syndrome: a case report 2026 Hillmann et al.

    But may have caused her to succumb to infection.
  8. Jonathan Edwards

    Invisible Illness A History, from Hysteria to Long Covid, 2026, Mendenhall (book)

    I do not see why she shouldn't. A review is not, as far as I am aware, confidential.
  9. Jonathan Edwards

    Severe difficulties with eating in ME/CFS

    Post moved from a thread about a specific person This case does seem to highlight the absurdity of an ME?CFS plan that aims to provide services for mild/moderate cases but completely ignores the severe. I suspect the inability of charities to help partly reflects the absence of much medical...
  10. Jonathan Edwards

    Invisible Illness A History, from Hysteria to Long Covid, 2026, Mendenhall (book)

    Actually, it is a good example of pseudoscience: " This illustrates that Invisible Illness is not hampered by Mendenhall’s intention and positive wish to help - it is her research lens that is her Achilles heel. " Where have we heard that before? Thou hypocrite, first cast out the mind-body...
  11. Jonathan Edwards

    Invisible Illness A History, from Hysteria to Long Covid, 2026, Mendenhall (book)

    That is pretty damning. From what i can gather from the quotes from the book it is the worst sort of humanities-style interference with a medical problem exactly along the BPS lines, presumably wrapped up in a way to superficially appear sympathetic.
  12. Jonathan Edwards

    Demarcation between science and pseudoscience: Still a Problem?

    Indeed, James Ladyman's "Every Thing Must Go" is a treat, at least for the first four chapters, just not much to do with medicine!
  13. Jonathan Edwards

    Demarcation between science and pseudoscience: Still a Problem?

    John Worall is mostly known for his work on structural realism, with James Ladyman. Their take is sensible, if not that novel, but it is way out in metaphysics in relation to anything medical. (The idea is that all we can know about the world is its mathematical causal structure.) Worrall got...
  14. Jonathan Edwards

    There aren’t any answers, we are looking for them and will support you until we find them

    Yes, but it is not what matters. And of course official approval depends on some people's opinions - so isn't any more rigorous. And politics comes into it a lot. I would say there are no known effective treatments. If you want to be pedantic. But no effective treatments is the reality.
  15. Jonathan Edwards

    Why are children and young people more likely to recover from ME/CFS than adults?

    There are conceivable explanations like there being more chance of new regulatory T cell clones turning off an adaptive immune error at an earlier age but they would be very speculative.
  16. Jonathan Edwards

    Demarcation between science and pseudoscience: Still a Problem?

    Maybe the problem for PoS is that it is done by people with no practical knowledge of science or real understanding of what it is about? That was my impression as a philosophy student. (I might make an exception for John Worrall, whose medical wife was my PhD student.) If medical science has...
  17. Jonathan Edwards

    Why are children and young people more likely to recover from ME/CFS than adults?

    The suggestion that autism might be relevant to the thread question seems to me to be very reasonable and scientifically important. A lot of genes relating to neurodevelopment have been coming up on genetics studies and the two age peaks for incidence of ME/CFS would be consistent with a role...
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