rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Merged thread - paper now published.
(Definitely not a recommendation)
(Yes, this is Jo Daniels of "shopping bags" fame and a member of the NICE committee)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1697260019302479
The conclusion is particularly egregious:
The confused comparisons with depression essentially amount to an ecologist who insists that elephants and rocks are essentially the same thing since they are both hard and grey. Experts are not supposed to be confused by superficial similarities. Or they could sit on an expert panel for the topic they display blatant ignorance. Both work, I guess.
(Definitely not a recommendation)
(Yes, this is Jo Daniels of "shopping bags" fame and a member of the NICE committee)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1697260019302479
This essentially describes the current model, it just phrases it slightly differently. So the current paradigm is convincing evidence but also should be examined for the first time ever (actually the 50th or so).Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) is a debilitating condition that affects 0.2–0.4% of the population. Health focussed anxiety is common across medical conditions, and may be relevant in CFS/ME. This study sought to identify the prevalence and impact of health anxiety (HA) in CFS/ME and evaluate the effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for HA in CFS/ME. Cross-sectional questionnaire methods and case-series design were used to achieve study aims. Analysis indicated that 41.9% of the CFS/ME clinic sample experienced threshold levels of health anxiety, which was associated with elevated symptom severity across several dimensions. Stepwise multiple regression indicated physical functioning and depression accounted for 23.8% of variance in fatigue; depression, fatigue and HA, accounted for 32.9% of variance in physical functioning. Large effect sizes and clinically significant changes were generated in the treatment study. HA is common in CFS/ME and likely to exacerbate fatigue and physical functioning. This study identifies HA as an important target for treatment, trial findings should be further replicated on a larger scale.
The conclusion is particularly egregious:
This is not the first study of exactly this, in fact there probably are at least two dozen identical ones. It literally is the current paradigm, so the suggestion that this is the first study is specutacularly wrong and ignorant. It's still not actual evidence of anything, this is pure cherry-picking and outcome-seeking.This is the first study to robustly examine prevalence rates of health anxiety in CFS/ME, acting as a larger scale replica of previous studies by the same group. Outcomes from both the prevalence study and treatment trial make a novel contribution to the current understanding and treatment of health anxiety and co-morbidity in CFS/ME. This study provides a clear rationale and platform for further research to replicate and enhance treatment options to this clinical population. Screening for comorbidity is strongly recommended.
The confused comparisons with depression essentially amount to an ecologist who insists that elephants and rocks are essentially the same thing since they are both hard and grey. Experts are not supposed to be confused by superficial similarities. Or they could sit on an expert panel for the topic they display blatant ignorance. Both work, I guess.
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