Carolyn Wilshire
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Good point, @Sean.So why make the changes, and then defend them so ferociously, if they are of no significance?
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So the changes do make a significant difference? Make up your minds.![]()
Good point, @Sean.So why make the changes, and then defend them so ferociously, if they are of no significance?
....
So the changes do make a significant difference? Make up your minds.![]()
Wessely said:In essence though they decided they were using a overly harsh set of criteria that didn’t match what most people would consider recovery
I don't think they can, unless our whole scientific establishment is rotten to the core ... which I cannot imagine to be the case. The more they expose themselves in this way, the more they allow real scientists (and other people too with a degree of nous) to see them for what they are. That statement will probably go down in history as one of the most revealing. Not even a throwaway statement, but in a written rebuttal. They could not be leaving a clearer, more solid evidence trail if they tried. To me, the very fact they lack the critical thinking to appreciate they are doing this to themselves, itself supports the notion they lack the critical thinking to run clinical trials.I don't see how scientists can survive saying this in the long term:
We prefer the definitions of recovery we used to those used by Wilshire et al. as they give absolute rates more consistent both with the literature, and with our clinical experience.
I had pondered this myself; felt need to be very cautious given there is so very much to learn with PACE, and the BBC have such a track record of going off half-cocked when it comes to getting under the skin of such things. Last thing you want is for something like More or Less to do a half-baked analysis, and then make some wiffley waffley proclamation that does more harm than good. But on the other hand, if they could be trusted to get it right ... that would be excellent.I’ve shared the PACE authors’ admission with Tim Hartford (BBC More or Less)
Sharpe et al. [3] refer to a number of studies performed by them and their collaborators which they believe provide independent support for their final recovery definition. They refer to several studies where the recovery rates following CBT, and/or following medical care alone, were numerically similar to the corresponding rates in their recovery paper (e.g. [8,9]). These observations are claimed as support for the use of their revised definition. Putting aside the issue of whether these studies are indeed representative of the literature, there are serious problems with this reasoning. First, most of the cited studies defined recovery differently to PACE, and if we make even a reasonable attempt to equate the definitions, then the convergence amongst recovery rates does not look quite so good.2
2 For example, the definition of recovery used in the studies by Deale et al. [8] and Knoop et al. [9] were a lot stricter than the revised criteria used in PACE. If the Deale et al. recovery criteria are applied to the PACE data, for example (it is possible to use three of the four criteria), the PACE recovery rates fall to a maximum of 9% for CBT, which is very different from the 24% for CBT cited in Deale et al.
Sharpe is apparently blocking everyone on Twitter that shares this article.
I don't think they can, unless our whole scientific establishment is rotten to the core ... which I cannot imagine to be the case.
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Twice as many people are cured of cancer using reiki as opposed to homeopathy.
Under one analysis when we changed the recovery definition halfway through the trial from the original protocol it was 80% versus 40%.
Under the second anaylsis with the original protocol it was 2% versus 1%.
As you can see this is twice as much in both analysis.
We do prefer the first analysis cos it is more inline wif what other reiki and homeopathy people what did study the same things did say.
All objective measures was dropped and our analysis is the best cos the other analysis did not have access to all the data so they don't know what we do know.
Our trial is definitive cos after we changed the recovery definitions halfway through the trial and magically matched the results of other studies that were not definitive and gave us the justification to run this trial costing £5 millon.
This trial was really bootiful!!
Sharpe is apparently blocking everyone on Twitter that shares this article.
@large donner - Have you considered taking up the 'patient involvement' opportunity to 'co-produce' the Plain English summaries for NIHR and MRC research projects?![]()
Sharpe is apparently blocking everyone on Twitter that shares this article.
Sharpe science.Sharpe is apparently blocking everyone on Twitter that shares this article.
I suspect that will only happen when pigs learn to fly, hee hee.![]()