Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Also interesting to see Peter White put his head above the parapet for what seems the first time in a while. Presumably he has not read the draft NICE guideline assessment!
As usual, the absence of evidence argument. If you design trials to not recognise certain kinds of evidence, then funnily enough you are not going to find it.No trials of graded exercise have shown to harm patients, say Dr Alastair Miller, Prof Paul Garner and Prof Peter White,
Please don't jinx it! We haven't seen the final version of the NICE guideline yet... we can't be sure he doesn't know something we don't.Also interesting to see Peter White put his head above the parapet for what seems the first time in a while. Presumably he has not read the draft NICE guideline assessment!
no but if it was going his way would he be bothering to send a letter to the Guardian??Please don't jinx it! We haven't seen the final version of the NICE guideline yet... we can't be sure he doesn't know something we don't.
I have replied as well@PhysiosforME have a short Twitter thread providing a counter argument here
Code:https://twitter.com/PhysiosForME/status/1370090545679372288
We're trying to work out how to do just thatI hope someone who knows these trials inside out can put together a response (perhaps in a Letter to the Guardian).
Yep, I wondering how it will be framed that we are misunderstanding him this time...
Byline said:No trials of graded exercise have shown to harm patients, say Dr Alastair Miller, Prof Paul Garner and Prof Peter White, so those with post-Covid fatigue syndrome should not be discouraged from trying it
Letter said:Dr Joanna Herman is right to call out the lack of care being offered to sufferers of long Covid (People with long Covid urgently need help. Why can’t we access it?, 10 March). The willingness of doctors to speak out as patients has done much to highlight the long-term effects of Covid-19.
We know that long Covid is more than one disease, all of which will need different treatments. But we do not know that graded exercise therapy is detrimental to recovery from the post-Covid fatigue syndrome. There are no such studies.
In contrast, we know that graded exercise therapy is an effective treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome (or ME), a clearly related condition. Moreover, no trials of graded exercise have shown harm to patients. We need trials of this treatment in post-Covid fatigue. In the meantime, let us not discourage patients from accessing what may be a helpful treatment, so long as it is provided by physiotherapists trained to properly deliver it.
Dr Alastair Miller Cumberland Infirmary, Carlisle, Prof Paul Garner Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Prof Peter White Queen Mary University of London
We're trying to work out how to do just that
It's an opinion letter. This is all they can do, assert their opinion. To me that signals a weakness in their political position right now. Hopefully."In contrast, we know that graded exercise therapy is an effective treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome (or ME), a clearly related condition. Moreover, no trials of graded exercise have shown harm to patients."
Hey guys, the science is settled, didn't you hear? Stop discussing this issue. The. Science. Is. Settled.
Imagine the absolute chutzpah needed to personally run p-hacked trials with inadequate reporting of harms, only to then issue a statement like this to the press.
I think in one of your intro posts, here in S4ME, you mentioned that one of the reasons you became convinced you needed to set your group up, was due to your own experiences with ME/CFS patients. I seem to recall you had found yourselves always able to help your patients, until you encountered people with ME/CFS, and that your experiences and perceptions then needed a reset, because pwME/CFS simply did not respond to exercise the way your training and experience said they should. I would have thought an inclusion of something like that might be very influential.We're trying to work out how to do just that
Please don't jinx it! We haven't seen the final version of the NICE guideline yet... we can't be sure he doesn't know something we don't.
The other interesting thing is that both the BACME info and a well known psychologist are falling over themselves to say - oh but of course we haven't been doing it like that for years anyway. We now have personalised treatment. The stuff in the PACE trial is no longer relevant so the fact that the evidence is low quality does not matter - we know what works.
A letter from Don Quixote, Sancho Panza and Rocinante it seems. (Take your pick.)
It's an opinion letter. This is all they can do, assert their opinion. To me that signals a weakness in their political position right now. Hopefully.
It really is telling that the only format they were allowed to be published is an opinion letter.
@PhysiosforME further to my previous post.I think in one of your intro posts, here in S4ME, you mentioned that one of the reasons you became convinced you needed to set your group up, was due to your own experiences with ME/CFS patients. I seem to recall you had found yourselves always able to help your patients, until you encountered people with ME/CFS, and that your experiences and perceptions then needed a reset, because pwME/CFS simply did not respond to exercise the way your training and experience said they should. I would have thought an inclusion of something like that might be very influential.
If you were able to cite an anonymized example or two all the better. But if not then more generalised, but nonetheless tangible, commentary from your real experiences.