Recording of EC being asked "or do you consider [ME] a psychiatric and psychological condition?" at APPGME 22 Jan 2007.
Recording of EC being asked "or do you consider [ME] a psychiatric and psychological condition?" at APPGME 22 Jan 2007.
Was the WHO classifications coding mandatory for the UK back when the 2007 guideline was being developed?
the (almost certainly deliberate) conflation between definition versus classification as an excuse for the 2007 GDG excluding the WHO classification.
These BPS psychiatrists' "science" is all about feelings isn't it! (Something else for them to conflate if they read this).The first, an excuse, is bs as they had to follow coding, regardles of how they were "feeling",
Technically correct, this is exactly what happened, just the other way around. Exactly as they were warned by people who actually understood this. Hence why there technically should not be a "feelings" exemption to this stuff, and yet here we are.But yeah, the NICE '07 Guideline Development Group did deliberately and knowingly not adopt the WHO classification of ME, because some of them "felt that to do so did not reflect the nature of the illness", and it "risked restricting research into the causes, mechanisms and future treatments of CFS/ME."
Technically correct, this is exactly what happened, just the other way around. Exactly as they were warned by people who actually understood this.
Yes.
- In 2004 a WHO communication stated that if a country accepts the WHO Regulations concerning nomenclature (which the Uk does), then that country is obliged to accept the ICD classification.
- In NICE's own Communications Progress report of September 2002 Anne Toni Rodgers, then one of the Directors of NICE, states: "The ICD-10 classification has been used as a basis for the new Institute classification directed at the informed reader. ICD-10 is used within the acute sector of the NHS and classification codes are mandatory for use across England."
- A 2007 NICE Taxonomy did list (ME) CFS as a disease of the Central Nervous System
You can confidently remove the "almost", that is exactly what they're doing here, it's a smokescreen.
This is just a slice of a much larger scandal that I've been working on the past month. (So know that you're not looking at a complete picture.)
But yeah, the NICE '07 Guideline Development Group did deliberately and knowingly not adopt the WHO classification of ME, because some of them "felt that to do so did not reflect the nature of the illness", and it "risked restricting research into the causes, mechanisms and future treatments of CFS/ME."
The first, an excuse, is bs as they had to follow coding, regardles of how they were "feeling", and the second (an actual reason) is mighty interesting given that e.g. the patients, GP's, nurse and dietician on the GDG would not have objected on such grounds, and Esther Crawley, who does not answer the question in the sound clip above because she knows full well it's inexcusable what she's trying to pull off,, received 2.3 million pounds in research grant awards between 2006 and 2016*, making her the second-best paid researcher after Peter White (3.5 million). (Together that comes to an amount of 5.8 million pounds between 2006 and 2016, which is more than than the other 10 people on the list combined, 4.37 million.)
*AfME's 2016 report on ME/CFS funding
Yes, not as clear as could be. I meant that the alternative behavioral definition they pushed forward did not "reflect the nature of the illness" and "restricted research", as they claimed. Their definition really did what they asserted an accurate definition they rejected, based on feelings, would do. Using a proper definition that recognized the ICD classification in neurology would not have done that, while the miscategorization into mental illness absolutely did. So what they warned about happened, because it's what they made happen, but the other way around: they caused this, while claiming to prevent it.I'm having a poor cognitive day, what do you mean with that it happened "the other way around"?
And who are "they" that were warned by people who understood what exactly?
(I'm sorry if this is obvious, I'm just not getting it through my brain in a way that makes sense.)
This new exciting post is designed to support Child Health Research at the University of Bristol. As the post holder you will be supported to develop their own programme of research in respiratory child health. You will have the opportunity to collaborate with world leading researchers in Child Health, Epidemiology and trials. You will be expected to develop and lead teaching programmes. You will be based in the Centre of Academic Child Health with significant support for both the teaching and academic components of the job.
For informal enquiries please contact Esther Crawley: esther.crawley@bristol.ac.uk
Respiratory health - would that include long COVID perhaps ?job ad
Consultant Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor in Respiratory Child Health
University of Bristol - Bristol Medical School
https://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/CSJ418/c...sociate-professor-in-respiratory-child-health
Respiratory health - would that include long COVID perhaps ?
History is playing on a loop again ...
job ad
Consultant Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor in Respiratory Child Health
University of Bristol - Bristol Medical School
https://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/CSJ418/c...sociate-professor-in-respiratory-child-health
it was more this line "You will have the opportunity to collaborate with world leading researchers in Child Health, Epidemiology and trials." that made me raise an eyebrow.I wouldn't read too much into Crawley's connection to this post
I think it might be fair comment as immediately it would include colleagues listed here: https://www.bristol.ac.uk/academic-child-health/staff-directory/ not to mention the 1000+ other academics associated with Bristol Uni's Medical School. Thankfully academia exists beyond the BPS Universe even if its adherents do get into senior management positions.it was more this line "You will have the opportunity to collaborate with world leading researchers in Child Health, Epidemiology and trials." that made me raise an eyebrow.
EC is top of that list; her profile is out of date as it still says she is the Deputy Chair of the CMRC.
Could it be true, that Professor Esther Crawley has retired?Acknowledgments
"The GenROC study was originally conceptualised with significant mentorship and guidance from Professor Esther Crawley who has now retired. We thank her for her significant contribution to the concept of the GenROC study. [...]"
Low KJ, Watford A, Blair P, et al
Improving the care of children with GENetic Rare disease: Observational Cohort study (GenROC)—a study protocol
BMJ Open 2024;14:e085237. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085237
https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/14/5/e085237