Yes Jerome emailed yesterday to say he had finally got a result.
Excellent article. I don't like giving the daily mail clicks but can't fault this article!
Yes Jerome emailed yesterday to say he had finally got a result.
Oddly enough, the DM has been the best UK newspaper in reporting on ME over the years. Some misses but far fewer than the others. Which is... really really bad for the serious news media. BBC and Guardian have been absolutely awful with us, spreading disinformation unchecked.Excellent article. I don't like giving the daily mail clicks but can't fault this article!
It now says there are 3 replies, but I can only see 2.so far only one reply to JBs piece
The national competence service for CFS/ME in Norway (known for a BPS approach) submitted a commentary to the draft NICE guidelines. It's available under the headline "news" (Nyheter) at their website.
Here is direct link to their commentary
https://oslo-universitetssykehus.no...te-for-cfsme/Documents/NICEcomments-MECFS.pdf
This is their first comment:
The committee has produced consultation documents consisting of 2634 pages. In our opinion, the committee has done a biased review of the evidence, and a biased assessment of patient. The committee has discarded Cochrane reviews on exercise and CBT, and has suggested radical changes in recommendations compared with previous NICE guidance, without a balanced review of why. Lillebeth Larun and other colleagues at NIPH revised their Cochrane review on exercise for patients with CFS/ME based on critical comments in 2019, in dialogue with Cochrane chief editors.
The primary studies on the different interventions are presented in tables over hundreds of pages, with standardized assessments regarding downgrading for indirectness, risk of bias etc.
The evidence is downgraded for indirectness when inappropriate diagnostic criteria not including PEM are used, without providing evidence to support the hypothesis that effect should be mediated by type of criteria (on the contrary there is evidence that the effect is similar across different criteria). It is strange to see how evidence from well conducted trials is reduced whereas undue weight is given to evidence from qualitative studies (even for questions on effectiveness/harm).
The evidence is downgraded for indirectness when inappropriate diagnostic criteria not including PEM are used, without providing evidence to support the hypothesis that effect should be mediated by type of criteria (on the contrary there is evidence that the effect is similar across different criteria). It is strange to see how evidence from well conducted trials is reduced whereas undue weight is given to evidence from qualitative studies (even for questions on effectiveness/harm).
Every comment is impertinent or just plain rambling. Really earning their national incompetence service title here.The national competence service for CFS/ME in Norway (known for a BPS approach) submitted a commentary to the draft NICE guidelines. It's available under the headline "news" (Nyheter) at their website.
Here is direct link to their commentary
https://oslo-universitetssykehus.no...te-for-cfsme/Documents/NICEcomments-MECFS.pdf
This is their first comment:
The committee has produced consultation documents consisting of 2634 pages. In our opinion, the committee has done a biased review of the evidence, and a biased assessment of patient. The committee has discarded Cochrane reviews on exercise and CBT, and has suggested radical changes in recommendations compared with previous NICE guidance, without a balanced review of why. Lillebeth Larun and other colleagues at NIPH revised their Cochrane review on exercise for patients with CFS/ME based on critical comments in 2019, in dialogue with Cochrane chief editors.
The primary studies on the different interventions are presented in tables over hundreds of pages, with standardized assessments regarding downgrading for indirectness, risk of bias etc.
The evidence is downgraded for indirectness when inappropriate diagnostic criteria not including PEM are used, without providing evidence to support the hypothesis that effect should be mediated by type of criteria (on the contrary there is evidence that the effect is similar across different criteria). It is strange to see how evidence from well conducted trials is reduced whereas undue weight is given to evidence from qualitative studies (even for questions on effectiveness/harm).
neatly omitting that this review is in process of being redone.Lillebeth Larun and other colleagues at NIPH revised their Cochrane review on exercise for patients with CFS/ME based on critical comments in 2019, in dialogue with Cochrane chief editors.
If this is indicative of the general quality of BPSer submissions, then we have absolutely nothing to worry about.The national competence service for CFS/ME in Norway (known for a BPS approach) submitted a commentary to the draft NICE guidelines.
I wonder if she'd recommend exercise to patients with uncompensated heart failure, unstable angina, severe pulmonary hypertension, severe aortic stenosis, or a dissecting aortic aneurysm? Uncontrolled exercise-induced asthma? Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy?There exist (almost) no illness conditions that recommend bed rest or no exercise.
I see they've taken no notice of the rationale for the removal of GET.Exercise will need to be graded up slowly adjusted to the individual patient, otherwise it may exacerbate both fatigue and pain.
I thought there would be some push-back to the committee noting population indirectness with regard to the studies using 1994 CDC or Oxford criteria; this was a predictable criticism of the evidence review, and one I'd expect the UK cabal to focus on.The evidence is downgraded for indirectness when inappropriate diagnostic criteria not including PEM are used, without providing evidence to support the hypothesis that effect should be mediated by type of criteria
You know, it might be difficult to differentiate between, say, Addison's disease and ME (especially if the characteristic skin discolouration does not occur in the former and the clinical presentation is insidious rather than one of sudden adrenal crisis), but anyone who thinks that it is at all "challenging" to differentiate between schizophrenia and ME has no business whatsoever practicing medicine.In clinical practice, psychiatric differential diagnoses are the most challenging. The list presented should include Psychiatric conditions like schizophrenia, bipolar disorders, anxiety og depressions.
Crap x a big number = an awful lot of crap.@Snow Leopard highlighted that ME researchers often repeat the previous failed study. The fact that these folks have volumes of flawed studies doesn't mean credence should be paid to them.
If this is indicative of the general quality of BPSer submissions, then we have absolutely nothing to worry about.
The listed author is Ingrid B. Helland, who according to the employees page of the "national competence service", is a specialist in paediatric neurology.