My mind threw up the phrase 'which in this case they have not got' but I became fascinated by my inability to track down its source. I remember now. It was 'Which in your case you have not got' and is part of a war poem about teaching recruits how to fire a rifle. Can anyone remember who by...
I am happy to be a part of 'we' - part of a community that needs to have its struggle appreciated. The main meaning is transparent enough.
I try to avoid talking of 'patients'. People with ME/CFS are, ironically, not patients because being a patient is defined by a relation of caring from a...
I would go for support rather than care, otherwise before you know it you will have an 'agreed care plan...' and off we go into the rehab jungle again. Both words make sense; I just think care is easier to subvert in the present context.
Pseudoscience is basically like cheating at Scrabble. If you try and get triple wrod score by spelling hyperbolic with two l's you are cheating. You might have been told that hyperbolic was spelled with two l's but most likely you are hoping nobody will notice.
If you are playing Scrabble it is...
Note that the same authors wrote a paper:
Mismatch between subjective and objective dysautonomia
In other words, retrospective assessment on clinical grounds is likely unreliable.
I don't think a retrospective review like this can be taken as reliable evidence of anything, sadly.
The patients studied will have been highly selected by referral routes and presenting symptoms that fit the clinic's interests. Rather than give figures for numbers claimed to have certain...
I wouldn't worry about things being philosophically precise. Philosophers pride themselves on being precise but are the most muddled talkers of all. They are constantly using terms out of context. There is even a branch of philosophy of language (pragmatics) championed by Charles Travis and...
Generally not. Chronic diseases with a stochastic element tend to have worse prognosis if of early onset. There are some odd patterns though. Juvenile onset pauciarticular inflammatory arthritis quite often remits by adulthood. Reiter's syndrome mostly occurs in young adults and remits. But then...
I don't see any problem here. I am aware of all the philosophers' ramblings but they have nothing much to do with the difference between science and pseudoscience relevant here. Pseudoscience is making claims that appear to be based on the language of science but don't actually make sense or...
The history of the diagnosis is a grand muddle. Some of the tender points are muscle, some are bony. I don't think there was any consistent conception. (And the tender points were abandoned.)
My own experience of the use of a fibromyalgia diagnosis in rheumatology is that it was generally very distinct from ME/CFS. It described chronic widespread unexplained pain. Some physicians used the term and most of them took a biopsychosocial approach despite the usual stuff of telling the...
The first sentence of the blub says:
For women, the possibility of experiencing medical gaslighting—having a health care provider dismiss or ignore their concerns without considering appropriate testing or creating a treatment plan—has always been a very real and present danger,
Which seems to...
But that is not the core of the original behaviour - which Eleanor describes very well. Persuasion is called persuasion. The sort of gaslighting you, but not some others think occurs from doctors has nothing to do with the behaviour in the film.
No, but it was just intended as an example of what gaslighting might mean if I had any idea.
If it means what you said then that's fine but why not just say what you said? Judging from hallmarkOvME's posts this is not what they mean by gaslighting - as indicated above.
I don't think anyone...
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