Sid
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
But such symptoms can also be psychologically generated
How, specifically?
But such symptoms can also be psychologically generated
One lingering question I have about the WSJ article, I read on screenshots. Does the link *prevailing* view just link to the PACE trial or does it link to evidence that it is the prevailining view.
Because it would be, frankly incorrect to make a statement about the prevailing view and then cite the pace trial, a treatment protocol study. I don't really understand it. Seems amongst the doctors in my region of the country and in the media, and US institutions, it is decidedly not the prevailing view.
Interesting and encouraging to hear. Here on the other side of the pond it most definitely is the prevailing view. I don't think the BPS view of things would get dislodged from its pedestal even if PACE got retracted, which it never will anyway. They would just fall back on the Cochrane review or some other thing to justify their position which is impervious to reason. How do you argue with someone who believes that thinking bad thoughts can make you disabled? You really can't.
It is Fox News but not quite as bad. In contrast, the WSJ news coverage is not considered a right-wing bastion.
Spot on. In Australia, PACE still very much embodies the prevailing view of ME/CFS in medicine here. I've told doctors that PACE has been debunked. All it does is trigger the usual eye-rolling.
There's very little that would make them change their minds.
New article in Morgenbladet - this time an interview with Paul Garner. Also this is paywalled, but here are two google translated quotes:A weekly, Norwegian newspaper - Morgenbladet - has an article about Long Covid where among others Wyller is interviewed.
The article is paywalled, but here are some google translated quotes, and it seems he gets a bit resistance from another researcher (Langeland):
Wyller is one of the country's leading experts on chronic fatigue syndrome or ME. There has long been a storm around this research because patient organizations and activists react negatively to research that is not only oriented towards biological and medical explanations - among other things because many have experienced not believing that the disease is real. Wyller is one of those who believe that social and psychological factors must also be taken into account in order to understand the disease - and who emphasize that different types of cognitive psychology can be helpful for many of the patients. This perspective emphasizes that there is no simple distinction between the nervous system, thought patterns and the body's function in general - rather, it is full of complex interactions. One explanation for ME may then be that a stressed nervous system has got stuck in some tracks from when the patient was acutely ill. In that case, it is important to get the nervous system to perceive and interpret the body and the environment in a different way. The controversy in the ME debate is largely about whether this can be achieved through psychological methods and gradual training or not.
Wyller is now working, together with an international network of researchers, on a major research project that will follow young people who become infected with the coronavirus. Then they will see if any of them develop chronic fatigue syndrome, and maybe find out what makes them vulnerable. The plan is to follow 500 young people for at least six months from the time they are confirmed infected. Along the way, they are examined with a wide range of tests: genetic analyzes, studies of the immune response and nervous system, mapping of personality and medical history - everything is necessary to form a holistic picture.
...
- I am convinced that more people get symptoms if everyone walks around and is afraid of these ailments. It is extremely important not to dramatize and give the impression that very many become very ill, says Wyller.
- But it is difficult, because this is also a very real phenomenon that deserves public attention. And it is of course crucial that individual patients are taken seriously - the condition is completely real and can be severely disabling, regardless of the underlying causes. This requires some wisdom both from us in the health care system and from the press.
Nina Langeland in Bergen says this is an issue they can not deal with.
- No, I certainly do not believe in hiding research findings for most people. Besides, it is my experience, after 35 years as a clinician, that it is wise to listen to what people say - they are incredibly often right.
Well, you can not turn on the light without wanting to change anything.
The ultimate insult.
These stories from Norway work a bit like a slap on the cheek. They are extraordinary. This "turn on the light" moment I'm talking about - it's real, says Paul Garner
Surely as a professor of medicine he cannot be this naive.
- It is a reasonable question. Hypotheses must be created somewhere. In evidence-based medicine, we say that one does not do a randomized controlled study of whether a parachute works or not. These stories from Norway work a bit like a slap on the cheek. They are extraordinary. This "turn on the light" moment I'm talking about - it's real, says Paul Garner.
Randomized controlled trials are obviously important, especially in biomedicine, when it comes to medicines and small effects. But here the effects are quite dramatic, and it should not be rejected.
There were stories like that coming out of Norway after unblinded studies of rituximab. Controlled studies showed it was a placebo effect. Surely as a professor of medicine he cannot be this naive.
Vogtian epiphany
It makes the BPS approach look like an emotionally-based belief system in search for confirmation.
For some reason that put me in mind of Vogons.....
It provides real evidence in fact. Just in case we needed one it is a slap on the cheek, a light turning on, except that in this case it is direct and incontrovertible evidence.
He is not a professor of medicine. He is a professor of doings sort of evidency things about world diseases at a tropical hospital in Liverpool and chums with those Cochrane people and stuff.
Pretty much anyone can be a professor these days. As I discovered, all you need to do is find someone for whom it is useful to make you a professor. You get points for being a professor but a lot more points for making other people professors you see.