Kitty
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Hm, I'd never heard of this group.
Me neither, but it could be more a WhatsApp group than a headquartered corporation.
Hm, I'd never heard of this group.
Hm, I'd never heard of this group.
14 is this:A literature review by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health found no evidence that shielding patients from sensory stimuli benefited those with severe fatigue.14
It should also be noted that the NIPH has a history of using too strict or outright illogical inclusions criteria for their literature reviews
Good point. It’s biased in their favour.Or too lax, if it suited them, as in the Cochrane exercise review .
This would be a good place to quote that Swiss study by Rea Tschopp which found that being told your illness was psychosomatic was the main reason behind suicidal thoughs in pwME.
Ironically I think Garner, Miller et al actually cited that study in the original opinion piece (for different reasons obviously).
Urgh the audacity.These disabilities, and the patients’ belief that they won’t recover, can harm their mental wellbeing.2
Looking further. The Swiss study that found suicidality in pwME to be mostly caused by psychosomatic interpretations of the illness. Is quite seriously cited by Miller et al to support this sentence
Urgh the audacity.
And clearly they must have seen the suicidality part since it’s in the abstract…
It makes me honestly wonder if some part of their longheld beliefs is straight up malicious and they know it.I would be breaking the site rules if I said how this makes me feel.
Instead I'll just invite us all to imagine the state of Miller's reputation in a few years time if the science comes together as predicted...
It makes me honestly wonder if some part of their longheld beliefs is straight up malicious and they know it.
Very few intend to cause harm, but many are able to ignore the harm they cause even when they are aware of it.
I don’t doubt that some do, but I don’t think it’s most of them. And I have no idea if it’s any of the ME/CFS ones.The chilling thing is that statistically, in terms of the numbers of people with ASPD (sociopathy/psychopathy) in high flying fields, there may well be a proportion of these researchers who know they are causing harm and do not give a toss.
I don’t doubt that some do, but I don’t think it’s most of them. And I have no idea if it’s any of the ME/CFS ones.
It’s barely getting any attention there, so I wouldn’t bother about it.Has anyone else been contacted by Linked In. Mr B has just received the following which is gathering support. Why would Paul Garner be on linked in stating these views?
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I never though I’d have a list with 10+ names in my head of researchers I wish every day would retire and spend more time with their grandchildren. (I know some of them are technically retired but I mean stop publishing things and speaking at every conference retire…)It’s barely getting any attention there, so I wouldn’t bother about it.
PG recently talked about how his way of dealing with «activists» is to continue talking. Apparently, he intends to do that through any available channel.
Why would Paul Garner be on linked in stating these views?
I think the combination of gaslighter and babbler would count!We now have the concept of 'multidisciplinary people' as if these were some sort of 'magic people', as opposed to 'muggles', with wands. What on earth does Garner think he is taking about. He seems to be auditioning for a part in Woody Allen's much underrated film 'Zelig'.
Would a combination of a plumber, an astronaut and a historian of Persian literature count as 'multidisciplinary'. Presumably a competent academic physician and a specialist nurse would not.