Michael Sharpe: Mind, Medicine and Morals: A Tale of Two Illnesses (2019) BMJ blog - and published responses

Yes, I insisted on this.

I didn't want to go into the arguments by Greco & Sharpe as I thought these were mostly beside the point. So my text wasn't a direct comment on their paper but a separate perspective on the same subject.

The problem with this though is that the Greco/Sharpe paper isn't linked either to your blog post or from it, and because it's a blog, it won't appear in the PubMed record.
 
I don't see Michiel's response in the "Responses" tab of the article, only Agardy's.

Not impressed with their publishing system. Bit awkward for a publishing company.
I'm obviously being a bit dense ... where is the Responses tab?
 
The problem with this though is that the Greco/Sharpe paper isn't linked either to your blog post or from it, and because it's a blog, it won't appear in the PubMed record.
Isn't the Sharpe article a blog too? So they should both appear in the same places, just not directly linked. And being a separate blog, I imagine more people will see it.
 
Isn't the Sharpe article a blog too? So they should both appear in the same places, just not directly linked. And being a separate blog, I imagine more people will see it.

No, it isn't a blog. They did publish a pre-commentary of the article in blog form, but that was essentially an advert for the main paper.

Responses appear on the tab to the left of the main article.
 
Thanks, Lucibee for clarifying. I find it all very confusing!

It *is* confusing - but that's them, not you. Their linking and site organisation is very poor.

The article itself is due to appear in their June edition (I know it's July already), which is previewed in yet another blog here: https://blogs.bmj.com/medical-humanities/2019/07/05/june-2019-special-issue-psychosomatics/

All the links are to the blogs about the papers and not the papers themselves, which doesn't help!
 
It *is* confusing - but that's them, not you. Their linking and site organisation is very poor.

The article itself is due to appear in their June edition (I know it's July already), which is previewed in yet another blog here: https://blogs.bmj.com/medical-humanities/2019/07/05/june-2019-special-issue-psychosomatics/

All the links are to the blogs about the papers and not the papers themselves, which doesn't help!


Is this simply to expand a fan base; we seem to be moving forward on basis of a personality cult.
 
Just have enjoyed comparing the number of retweets and likes...

(8 retwets, 12 likes)
Code:
https://twitter.com/MedHums_BMJ/status/1133753380210450433


(21 retweets, 48 likes in 2 days)
Code:
https://twitter.com/MedHums_BMJ/status/1146720589413064704


(Didn't see a bmj medical humanities tweet on Sharpe's/ Greco's full article)
 
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Just have enjoyed comparing the number of retweets and likes...

(8 retwets, 12 likes)
Code:
https://twitter.com/MedHums_BMJ/status/1133753380210450433


(21 retweets, 48 likes in 2 days)
Code:
https://twitter.com/MedHums_BMJ/status/1146720589413064704


(Didn't see a bmj medical humanities tweet on Sharpe's/ Greco's full article)

Also the ratio. If you have more comments than likes, that's usually see as a bad thing.
 
Just have enjoyed comparing the number of retweets and likes...

(8 retwets, 12 likes)
Code:
https://twitter.com/MedHums_BMJ/status/1133753380210450433


(21 retweets, 48 likes in 2 days)
Code:
https://twitter.com/MedHums_BMJ/status/1146720589413064704


(Didn't see a bmj medical humanities tweet on Sharpe's/ Greco's full article)

And Michael Sharpe tweeted it twice.

Live look at Sharpe being sad that people don't pay attention to his pathetic attempt at philosophy-without-thought about his medicine-without-morality:
b16.jpg
 
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