Ravn
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Is she involved with Recovery Norway? If so, would that be relevant?Collaborations with advocacy groups relating to the content of the article
Is she involved with Recovery Norway? If so, would that be relevant?Collaborations with advocacy groups relating to the content of the article
So a review without rigour. I think in such cases, very careful declarations of interests become extremely important.Narrative literature review and consensus development with experienced practitioners.
- Submitted content cannot be funded or produced by any commercial organization with a financial interest in the topic of the review.
- Funders of submitted content should be declared in the ‘Sources of support’ section of the manuscript, including a statement describing the funder’s role in the design, conduct, or publication of the review (if any).
- All financial and non-financial interests within 36 months of the submission date must be declared by all authors at the time of submission and acceptance.
- Authors without financial conflicts of interest must make up at least two-thirds of the author team.
- First and last authors listed in the author byline must be entirely free of financial conflicts of interest and cannot have been involved in studies funded by industry and eligible for inclusion in the review.
- Any author who has been involved in the conduct, analysis, and publication of a study that could be included in the review cannot make study eligibility decisions about, extract data from, carry out the risk of bias assessment for, or perform GRADE assessments of that study.
The following funding and conflicts of interest may prevent people from being authors of submissions (depending on whether they are first or last author, and the overall proportion of authors in the team):
- Current or past employment (part-time or full-time) within 36 months of the submission date by a commercial organization with a financial interest in the topic of the review.
- Ownership of a commercial organization with a financial interest in the topic of the review
- Personal ownership of (or pending application for) a patent for an intervention, diagnostic test or prognostic marker that is relevant to the topic of the review. This does not include patents developed, but not owned by individuals.
Interestingly, the policy says that relevant private professional practice should be declared:
- Payment from organizations with a financial interest related to the topic of the review for e.g. speaker fees, honoraria, consultancies, and membership of advisory boards.
- Support for sabbaticals and study tours from organizations with a financial interest related to the topic of the review of the Cochrane Library content.
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- Financial support for fellowships and other professional placements from organizations with a financial interest related to the topic of the review.
Income from relevant private professional practice should be declared but will not normally prevent contribution to the creation of Cochrane Library content.
Non-financial interests that must be declared:Financial interests are relevant if the funding or payment is made by a commercial organization that develops, manufactures, markets or distributes (anywhere in the world), a product or service relevant to the topic of the review. Such funding or payment may include (but is not limited to):
- current/past employment or ownership in a commercial entity with an interest in the topic, including patent or license ownership;
- speaker fees, honoraria, consultancies, and membership of advisory boards (whether paid to the individual OR their institution);
- payment of travel, accommodation, subsistence and conference registration expenses;
- research funding from a commercial organization (including if paid to the individual’s institution);
- payments to the author directly or via their institution or affiliation.
Authors must also declare all relevant non-financial interests, though these do not prevent people from being authors of submission. ..Non-financial interests are considered relevant if they have a direct and obvious connection to the topic of the review, and may include:
- ideological or political opinions published in the public press, broadcast and social media;
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- any affiliation to an organization (including not-for-profit) that has a declared ideological or political opinion.
or to decouple from people in their lives who are sceptical of CBT
There have been lots of discussions in US press about the trend of people deciding to cut off "toxic" people in their lives--including parents and siblings--and of the role of therapists in encouraging such behavior.It is common enough for CBT and other psychotherapists to poison relationships with suggestions of abuse where there was none to the extent that families can be completely destroyed.
I would even question whether it should be lawful.
I think the bottom line here is that a conflict of interest is not defined by a list of examples, it is defined by a conflict of interest. We all know what that is - potential benefit accruing to the individual influenced by the writing of an article or, in particular, the way it is written.
I'm not familiar with her or with ICIT. Who is she? What is it?
Landmark founded RN, in order to avoid the changes in the laws about marketing of alternative treatments. They claim it’s a patient organisation, but it was founded by LP instructors or their close family.Is she involved with Recovery Norway? If so, would that be relevant?
And Jo's definition here of COI is so broad that it would impact anyone who practices a specific intervention and also researches it having to declare a COI because they offer the intervention--even if they have a salary, given the impact on other ways of making money. Maybe that should be the accepted standard for declaring COIs. But at present, it isn't.
Maybe something like:dave30th said:What would the disclosure actually be? "LL is an LP practitioner."
Is that what people are asking for? What else would it say?
Trudie Chalder has received royalties for self-help books on chronic fatigue and ad hoc payments for workshops on long-term conditions and travel expenses and accommodation costs of attending conferences. She is on the Expert Advisory Panel for Covid-19 Rapid Guidelines and is in receipt of research grants from Guy’s and St Thomas’ Charity, NIHR and UKRI.
Hege Eriksen is cofounder and part owner of Stressprofessorene, giving paid lectures on stress and coping.
Henrik B Jacobsen receives honorariums for lectures and workshops about stress and health.
Hans Knoop receives royalties for a published manual of cognitive behavior therapy for ME/CFS.
Live Landmark receives honorarium for lectures about stress and coping and payment as an instructor in the Lightning Process.
Helena Liira is the former Editor in Chief of the Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care.
Silje E Reme receives honorariums for lectures and workshops about stress and health.
Michael Sharpe is President of the European Association of Psychosomatic medicine and receives royalties for academic publications.
Henrik Vogt initiated and was the former leader of Recovery Norway which is an organization consisting of people who have experienced recovery from conditions such as post-viral illness like PACS and CFS/ME from 2017 until March 2022 and is still a member of this organization. He discloses this as an intellectual and personal COI but declares no financial or economic conflicts of interest.
I'd be curious too. I find often in discussions about some of these things that there does seem to be a cross-cultural difference. For me, if I'm going to write a journal, I'd like it to be a slam-dunk, not a borderline case. I can certainly entertain an argument about why it would be good if she made the kind of declaration you suggest. But is she required to by current standards? That's a different matter. Does a BACME member have to disclose membership in BACME? To Cochrane, it seems so. In general, for journals, it seems not.I wonder if most other U.S. members would instinctively share your view & most of the Brits/other Europeans would share mine?
Here is the declaration from the Oslo manifest
What is striking about the study we're discussing here is the complete absence of any reported COIs.
I also don't see how LP is any different from CBT, which is so vague as to be meaningless. And she is now a psychologist, so while not a physician, she is an 'expert'. The issue here is mainly that everyone involved in this ideology has significant biases and conflicts of interest, so much that it's normalized to the point where it's not really considered to apply them as a rule. Plus, let's not kid ourselves, most of the people involved in ethical rulings also think LP is a perfectly acceptable therapy for us, so they would never consider this a problem. The fact that most who promote CBT+GET are perfectly happy promoting LP alongside says it all.Landmark is not a clinician and LP is not a therapy
Except that she hasn't, including being an author of this paper and all. Chalder is no different than Parker or Landmark. None of these people are. They are all impossibly biased and conflicted about it, but the entire medical system is just as biased and conflicted about it, no one wants to admit how this disastrous ideology has destroyed millions of lives and incurred trillions in losses, so the entire system is extremely motivated at maintaining the lies, the same lies that the LP promotes.If the CBT for ME/CFS is useless, (Chalder) can (and does) move on to researching and using CBT for other conditions including both psychological and physical conditions. She therefore has no conflict of interest in researching CBT for ME/CFS or anything else. Her job and income are secure.
I've spent so much time discussing the COI issue that I haven't even had time yet to read the actual paper and see how stupid it is for myself!
For me, if I'm going to write a journal, I'd like it to be a slam-dunk, not a borderline case.
You don't come across as flip to me at all. I was worrying that, collectively, all our comments might come across as a lot of pressure -- so to be clear, I (for one, at least) just engaged out of interest in the question, I don't meant to suggest you should write to this journal if that doesn't feel right to you.I hope it doesn't seem like I've been flip here.
I was worrying that, collectively, all our comments might come across as a lot of pressure