Whatever happened to the principle that the welfare of the child was the paramount consideration. Forty years ago it used to be in the Children's Act 1969, but will have been replaced by now.
Recommendation 30–Advice for suspected functional neurological disorders
As functional neurological symptoms usually fluctuate and evolve with time, the committee agreed thatit was important to address the nature of the condition with people with this condition in order to allay concern about...
I am sorry if I have led people astray. I have major doubts about this. My comment was mainly directed at the title "Shine a light", which I presumed would be recognised as a well known euphemism.
I just found this paper on the subject. It is not often that one finds such useful commentary. One presumes that the author is familiar with rhyming slang.
Shine a Light
Photobiomodulation and the brain – has the light dawned...
It is very odd. The interpretation to be drawn from the piece is that the patient in Wales has not been downstairs for almost two years, her partner has spoken to a doctor in England and he has recommended this treatment which entails crowdfunding. Should not a patient be actually seen, examined...
Presumably that would have been the occasion on which someone was found to be in possession of a small knife, for use in aiding the consumption of her packed lunch.
I don't understand the failure to correct simple errors, which could easily be put right. KK is presumably going to be writing another piece about Cochrane. She may already be being briefed about it, for all we know. Why would they want outstanding complaints to remain on the record when that...
It seems strange that there hs never been any information as to how Peter Lilley and his department came to be in discussion with UnumProvident about this. It must have been as a result of lobbying and negotiations arising after the 1992 election. Perhaps the idea was to take Labour's election...
My recollection is that it made clear the parameters of the investigation and either implied or stated that other matters were outwith the remit of the enquiry. It is hard to know whether it would be more serious to fail to understand that, or to misrepresent it.
The only quote I can think of which comes close to that would be from the Eliot Slater lecture
www.margaretwilliams.me/2003/prof-wessely-lecture-notes_12may1994.pdf
On looking at that again it is perhaps surprising that he has not reprised a variation of that all that all time favourite from...
I wonder where we would have been today if people had gone along with Holmes et al's original description of a "chronic mononucleosis like syndrome", rather than choosing "chronic fatigue syndrome".
I was reading about neurasthenia yesterday. Apparently the army had a post of "Inspector of temporary non-effectives". I thought that just about sums us up. Unless, of course, it's permanent.
You probably know this, but it was thought to stand for "young upwardly-mobile professional" or "young urban professional". There may be some too young to remember.
Does it really help people to not question their belief that "toxic masculinity" has contributed to their condition?
Would we not normally be asking: where is the evidence, where is the control group? If you insist on the term "toxic masculinity", what about correlation is not causation?
is...
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