Mithriel
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
As I understand it in most areas of medicine, researchers are usually accused of defining their inclusion criteria too strict; of selecting patients where they think treatment will work. Clinicians than usually reply that this is not a realistic representation of their clinical practice where only a small percentage would meet those criteria, so the study is not as impactful as it claims etc. etc.
So when people argue that the PACE trial has broad inclusion criteria, I think most researchers from outside the field would initially interpret this as a strength, not a flaw.
They would have been able to legitimately claim that the treatment worked for at least some - that's all. And of course if they had monitored deterioration properly that would have come to light and the distinction would have been made. If they had done the trial properly and interpreted it properly all would have been well.
Which brings us back to the fact that the error was to do a trial very badly, not to have broad inclusion criteria per se.
There are always risks of harm in trials. Part of the point of a trial is to make sure there is no harm. Prior to PACE there was no clear evidence of harm as far as I am aware. We still do not have reliable evidence of harm. What we have is a strong suggestion that there may be harm and that is enough to make treatment unethical. The unethical aspect of PACE was to fail very badly to adequately document deterioration.
Thank you again for discussing this, it is a vital thing for us.
To state the case very baldly, the medical profession can't believe, don't know or don't accept the way that patients with ME have been treated by the so called experts. The analogy that springs to mind is the way black people complain about the justice system. All the legislation has safeguards built in but it only works if people stick to those rules. Black people believe that the rules are not applied properly to them because of an inbuilt prejudice.
Similarly, it is so common as to have lost its shock value the way that the rules do not apply to people with ME. You only have to browse the work of Dave Tuller to see that in action with the BMJ but it has been going on for years.
Doctors do trials on MS, cancer, everything when they are trying to find out something about the disease. ME trials are set up to show that people with ME are not really sick. This works best if you can be selective about who goes into it.
We do not like to say it, but the insurance industry does not have to pay out for psychological diseases. When the ME clinics in the UK were mostly based in the mental heath sector patients complained but we were assured we were misinterpreting that was just where there was space. The next week an insurance company said ME was now classed as a mental heath issue. They were forced to retract but the advice to the DWP remained the same "People with ME think they can't walk but they could if they wanted to" This has now been changed to admitting that some people can't walk but insists that if that is the case muscles will be wasted something that is very rare in ME.
So everything that has been said about medical trials is true for everyone else but not for ME because there is a dark history and agenda behind it all. Being paranoid does not mean it isn't true

Simon Wessely said that his intention was to destroy the idea of ME as a disease and he has only failed because of the work of very sick patients and now the likes of Dave Tuller and Jonathan Edwards.
I hesitate to post this because anything we say will be used to fuel the idea of us as antiscience terrorists needing the surveillance of the special branch. Though that in itself shows how little the treatment of ME compares with other diseases.