Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Somebody has asked me for information on where the PACE Trial investigators dismiss concerns about the poor results on the employment measure in the trial.
I found this:
https://meassociation.org.uk/2013/0...ournal-of-psychological-medicine-august-2013/
Economic data, such as sickness benefits and employment status, have already been published by McCrone et al. (2012). However, recovery from illness is a health status, not an economic one, and plenty of working people are unwell (Oortwijn et al. 2011), while well people do not necessarily work. Some of our participants were either past the age of retirement or were not in paid employment when they fell ill. In addition, follow-up at 6 months after the end of therapy may be too short a period to affect either benefits or employment. We therefore disagree with Shepherd (2013) that such outcomes constitute a usefulcomponent of recovery in the PACE trial.
But there was another excuse somewhere where they claim that a poor economic situation in the UK could explain the results [even though the trial took place over several years so this seems very questionable: if there was a sudden downturn, that would only affect a relatively small percentage of participants while longer longer downturn would also affect the baseline scores also].
Can anyone find the source or alternatively come up with phrases that might help an Internet search. Thanks.
@Esther12 @dave30th
I found this:
https://meassociation.org.uk/2013/0...ournal-of-psychological-medicine-august-2013/
Economic data, such as sickness benefits and employment status, have already been published by McCrone et al. (2012). However, recovery from illness is a health status, not an economic one, and plenty of working people are unwell (Oortwijn et al. 2011), while well people do not necessarily work. Some of our participants were either past the age of retirement or were not in paid employment when they fell ill. In addition, follow-up at 6 months after the end of therapy may be too short a period to affect either benefits or employment. We therefore disagree with Shepherd (2013) that such outcomes constitute a usefulcomponent of recovery in the PACE trial.
But there was another excuse somewhere where they claim that a poor economic situation in the UK could explain the results [even though the trial took place over several years so this seems very questionable: if there was a sudden downturn, that would only affect a relatively small percentage of participants while longer longer downturn would also affect the baseline scores also].
Can anyone find the source or alternatively come up with phrases that might help an Internet search. Thanks.
@Esther12 @dave30th