I doubt it. She knows what she's doing: she's launched a deliberate and systematic campaign against ME/CFS patients. Though she might be delusional about some aspects of ME/CFS itself :-P
Yeah, media embedding is malfunctioning, and it happens automatically whether I want it to or not o_O I put an embedded link into normal text to avoid it for now.
I think this is the same climate change BS which the Science Media Centre (SMC) was promoting at the same time with Esther Crawley's SMILE trial. If so, the BBC may have lost their appetite for what the SMC has been feeding them.
From what I understand, the research was done on PBMCs, which are certain types of blood cells. Basically it would include B cells, T cells, NK cells, and monocytes. So those are all cells involved in the immune system. The cells of the ME/CFS patients didn't respond nearly as well to stress...
Yeah. If there's any doubt regarding whether it's a BPS or Biomedical study, it's almost always BPS :-P They thrive on doubt, whereas biomedical research tends to be about seeking clarity.
They're BPS fatigue researchers - fans of CBT and GET, plus subjective outcomes. Two are psychiatrists, two are from a CBT/GET "fatigue clinic", and the other two seem like general fans of the healing powers of exercise. Most of them co-authored a letter where they expressed the belief that...
It can help to restructure activities a bit to avoid the worst problems. Eg, use a shower chair and rest for a minute or two after each bit of scrubbing, don't raise arms over your head (or tuck elbows down at least).
The Dutch education system is very different. Starting around age 11-12, students go to three different types of high schools, basically geared at either going to trade school at 16 with some apprenticeship, normal university at 17, or a research/science university at 18.
Which track they end...
Primarily focused on Fox's blog post claiming the Science Media Centre isn't biased, with a lot of specific questions as to what steps they take to ensure that. He also calls out some of the more blatant bullshit:
The whole blog is well worth a read, as always :D
My thought is that the image you posted isn't a copyright issue, since the image quality is low enough that we can't read the article. But it is nice to see the image of the article, since that demonstrates the high profile of the story. I can't imagine the publisher having a problem with it...
The author doesn't seem to have involvement with ME/CFS, but learned about it from the novel written by Nasim Marie Jafry:
He talks about the downfall of PACE a fair bit, which gives us a look from an outsider's perspective:
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