I think the PACFIND study and the people involved are important in the current push for holistic clinics for Medically Unexplained Symptoms. They have some interesting connections.
There are a series papers coming out of the PACFIND study, you can find them with the PACFIND tag.
Catherine Pope is one common factor in the papers. She is an Oxford academic, a Professor of Medical Sociology at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care. She is Chair of the NIHR Senior Investigator award committee. She is therefore involved in NIHR decision-making about research funding.
Her research interests encompass organisational change in health care, service delivery and reconfiguration, workforce and work in health services, and the impact of digital and Web technologies on health care and services.
Catherine is a Trustee and Treasurer of the Foundation for the Sociology of Health and Illness. This operates the Journal of Sociology of Health and Illness and makes awards to post-graduates. The Foundation is funded by Wiley, Cochrane's publisher.
I recognised the name
Chris Eccelstone in the author list, I have talked about him before,
here. Some excerpts from that post:
Eccleston was previously a senior editor at Cochrane, including in the Mental Health and Neuroscience Network:
Embodied: The psychology of physical sensation (2015) by C. Eccleston
Chronic fatigue patients appear to demonstrate a high level of self-criticism and negative perfectionism (
Luyten et al., 2011). People are highly critical and demanding in a self-defeating pattern that fuels ruminating thoughts of failure, and so depression. This pattern can be self-perpetuating as people fail to reach unrealistically high targets, which reinforces a belief of personal inadequacy. Specific beliefs are that the fatigue is uncontrollable, likely to lead to catastrophic outcomes, and that further activity will lead to physical damage. All appear to play a part in maintaining a lack of engagement with activity (
Lukkahatai and Saligan, 2013).
Other strong beliefs, perhaps fuelled by the social context of CFS as a contested illness, are beliefs about the causes of the disease and what needs to be done. Simply put: if one believes strongly that exercising is not only going to be fatiguing but that it will cause damage, then one is unlikely to exercise. Further, one is likely to consider anyone who is suggesting exercise to be at least unwise and perhaps unkind. Ironically, the person with CFS can appear to observers to be passive and resting. The opposite is normally true. People with fatigue tend to be actively ruminating about possible solutions, and often desperate for change, but may be engaging in self-defeating attempts to achieve unachievable solutions
.
Cochrane has named
seven Emeritus Coordinating Editors in 2020, celebrating their achievements and recognizing their efforts over many years of service. In this profile, we hear from Chris Eccleston, who is Coordinating Editor of
Cochrane Pain, Palliative, and Supportive Care (PaPaS).
Can you tell us about yourself?
I am a professor of pain science at the University of Bath, where I am the director of the Centre for Pain Research. My team and I are active in behavioural science and chronic pain, from mechanism to treatment innovation and development.
In 2020 Ecclestone was leaving Cochrane to work on "innovating new models of care in the treatment of chronic pain".
This from a programme of a March 2025 conference for the NZ Pain Society
Chris founded and directed the Bath Pain Management Unit from 1994-2008, including the first residential paediatric pain programme. He continues to consult internationally on the development on new services and team training in chronic pain management.
He has a keen interest in evidence based medicine and research integrity, having served 10 years as the coordinating editor of Pain, Palliative and Supportive Care Cochrane Review Group, and is a founder member of the Entrust-PE Framework (
https://m.entrust-pe.org/).
He had some role in the evaluation of the Larun et al review in 2019 - see
here.
It's not surprising that Garner is tweeting about PACFIND.
Those two are the only authors that I have spent a bit of time looking at for this, but there are a lot of links there to the problems we have getting good care.
Quoting some previous posts in this thread that are relevant.
Maybe we should stop giving the authors benefits (grants and employment) and stop assuming that they are scientists just because they and their friends say they are. They seem awfully confused about themselves, and it appears to be spreading when they talk about it. Luckily, I know some people that can help them with their unhelpful beliefs and behaviours.
This is why it is so important that advocacy and support groups do not get 'into the tent' with health professionals who by their own admission live in fairyland.
I don't know whether (and we should look up each of these to check, along with also checking whther for example they are part of or making money from eg 'insurance medicine' type things) these individuals are tenured or are on fixed term contracts
Pre 2020, Dr Neha Issar-Brown was at the MRC and had been their rep with the CMRC.
(Research director of Versus Arthritis, was the representative on the ME/CFS Research collaborative)