Snow Leopard
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Seems to me there is a lot of "politics" going on behind the scenes on this one...
Sorry don't know if Vink sent his paper to Cochrane. If I remember his paper correctly it was an analysis of the current Cochrane review highlighting the problems with it, rather than bringing in more recent literature literature. Have I understood your question properly? My brain isn't at all good today.Did Mark Vink send his reanalysis to Cochrane, or is this another paper that makes their review out of date?
Better twice than not at allI see it has been posted and discussed already. Sorry, I thought it was new.
This interview is from the same Cochrane mtg, same interviewer and is supposed to be about Evidence Based Medicine with a GP..
http://www.evidentlycochrane.net/ev...eforall-interview-with-dr-margaret-mccartney/
This strategy can be far more effective when faced with very potent opposition. The point is that with each small advance, you dig in and consolidate and hold that ground. One all or nothing offensive is very high risk, and is the sort of thing the BPS opposition are very adroit at counteracting. I think this approach might be giving them some sleepless nights.We can only hope that Cochrane are taking this approach of small steps in good faith. It is very British for change to happen in small increments rather than Big Bang.
Exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome
Lillebeth Larun, Kjetil G Brurberg, Jan Odgaard‐Jensen, Jonathan R Price | 25 April 2017
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Feedback submitted, 2 December 2018
Note: This comment may relate to a previous version of this Review.
Recently I have published a reanalysis of this Cochrane review. Unfortunately there are many problems with the review and the trials in it. For example, P‐Hacking, extensive endpoint changes, overlap in entry/recovery criteria, selecting patients who don't have the disease, ignoring null effects, relying on subjective outcomes in unblinded trials and ignoring the absence of objective improvement. The reanalyses which looked at the objective outcomes showed that graded exercise therapy is not an effective treatment for ME/CFS. The studies in the review do not provide any evidence that graded exercise therapy is safe, on the other hand, patient evidence and the literature show that it is not safe.
The open access reanalysis can be read here: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2055102918805187
Reply
Many thanks for your feedback on this review. Cochrane recognises the importance of the review and is committed to providing a high quality review that reflects the best current evidence to inform decisions. The Editor in Chief is currently holding discussions with colleagues and the author team to determine a series of steps that will lead to a full update of this review. Your feedback will be considered as part of this process so that it can inform future versions of the review. These discussions will be concluded as soon as possible.
Contributors
Feedback submitted by: Mark Vink
Response: Jessica Hendon (Managing Editor of the Cochrane Common Mental Disorders Review Group)
Declarations of interest:
No conflict of interest declared.
If this is being done genuinely by Cochrane possibly the best outcome Larun & co can hope for is to agree the review is “out of date” and accept withdrawal and a fresh review by a new team. This could be announced in a relatively low key way and may not draw much press interest. For their reputations resisting withdrawal and risking unilateral withdrawal could be seriously shooting themselves in the foot. A managed retreat or a last ditch defense.