Indeed information -scary or otherwise - can have a big impact on patients. It gives them the tools to best manage their condition.
It doesn't matter if reality is scary or not. It's reality, and denying it doesn't help one bit, and usually makes things far worse. There are very few situations in life when lying to others about hard truths delivers a better (or less worse) result for them.
If I am dying of cancer then damn right I want to know the full story, and pronto. How else can you optimise your remaining choices?
The attitude of people like Garner and Sharpe, et al, is that the bulk of humans are stupid hysterical ninnies, permanently allergic to and terrified of reality,and who have to be guided through life by our superiors using lies and coercion (however sugar coated).
I think it's because him and his chums have gotten away with outrageous behaviour before and have never been punished for it. It makes a person very sloppy.
Yep. Until they feel some serious consequences they will keep right on.
Also, is there no other (legal or otherwise) way of getting PACE retracted - given all its flaws? the editors of the lancet don’t agree - but is there no way of making them do it regardless, given what’s actually in PACE?
I fear that as long as PACE (and other papers?) aren’t retracted, this is the kind of pushback and claims we will keep seeing.
I initially thought PACE should be retracted. But not now. It does contain useful data, that actually tell us something – mainly that the psychosocial approach doesn't provide explanatory or therapeutic power. If anything, PACE disproved the CBT/GET model.
In fact I remember specifically it saying something like, you have nothing to lose and everything to gain.
Until you are dead there is always something to lose.
It so complicated to write a thorough rebuttal for.
I think that one of the ways PACE has fought back is that so many people feel ground down by the process of responding seriously to stuff like this. It's difficult to stay motivated.
This.
Much as I would like to see people be personally accountable, I would rather we sought change for how patients are treated and trials are designed. This is also where, right now, we are gaining allies at the moment because it's about science.
I agree.
If I recall Valerie also suggested a reconciliation of sorts by way of apology from patients for alleged threats and so on. That's a step too far for me.
Absolutely opposed to it too. That is an admission of guilt. Under no circumstances should the patient community apologise for things we did not do, or had no knowledge of, and have not been proven to any satisfactory degree.
I have certainly made many harsh criticisms and characterisations of certain people and institutions. But I am also very certain that none of it even comes close to being legitimately classed as genuine harassment and threats.
I think our approach to this should be that whenever those claims are made we should demand – not politely request, demand – a top level formal inquiry into the claims, with full subpoena powers for documents and witnesses.
If the patient community (as opposed to one or two individual patients) has anything substantial to answer for then we should own it and get it over and done with. Partly because that is the right thing to do, but equally so there is one less excuse for the BPSers to avoid scrutiny.
OTOH, if – as I believe – we don't have anything to answer for, then those guilty of grossly defamatory claims of harassment and threats, made entirely in order to avoid proper scrutiny of their shoddy and unethical work, should be exposed and held to proper account.
I don't believe the patient community has anything to fear from such an inquiry. But I am very confident the claim makers do, and will not be too keen on it at all. Watch for all sorts of excuses from them, like
we don't want to agitate the patient community any further, it's all in the past, we are prepared to let this go, etc. Probably accompanied by a few tears for show.