I think multiple things can be true at the same time:
- Ideally, we need more very good researchers in the field of ME/CFS.
- The lack of funding for ME/CFS research has hindered basic research from being done.
- A lot of the current research has been wasted due to poor methodology or hypotheses. This is true for all of medicine.
- Funding and attention attract all kinds of researchers - and maybe more of the bad ones.
- We need government funding do to large scale basic research like genetics, large cohort tracking, biomarker verification.
- Really good ideas will likely receive funding today regardless of the bureaucracy in place.
- An organisation might attract people that at good at playing the organisation game instead of people that are good at achieving results with said organisation.
I don’t think more funding, attention, or public organising is necessarily bad per se. But I don’t think it’s a guarantee for a better outcome. And it might not shift the scale at all.
Agreed. And your point 6. And thinking of current things underway like decodeME, sequenceME and now I’m going to stop naming individually because of that leaving ones out issue
but just as we might get some headway and good teams on things
whatever the results on the basis eg the gene stuff is objective and not like behavioural stuff with no null hypothesis then it can move things forward by at the least ruling certain things in or out in likelihood? And we start getting a literature if science stuff anyway that might want to knit itself together because we get more bits of the picture confirmed ,fir what they aren’t if just fit with as much as what they are)
I do worry that historically it has felt like over too many years just as things have turned a corner and something has collected up after a long crushing dystopia then in comes something else as some change or initiative that just disrupts that momentum and crowbars things back to people like bps getting back involved etc. Even though they’ve done their one-trick pony to death in iterations we know they are trying to do a surface level rebrand which seems as deep as a spray paint with proms, renaming their behavioural brainwashing coercion to brain training (after toying with re education in the middle)
Something about this tells me somehow it could increase more of those who aren’t good to start lobbying as if they are entitled to c amount of the spoils etc and embroil those just getting going in politics that with their current momentum they mightnt have needed it at all if things were just left open so that good achievement in current things starts a rolling stone for them. Importantly quality of output and methodology and researchers behaviour starts being the main thing that impacts /attracts funding (future funding ends up being based on past projects demonstrating quality and ethics etc)
I want to be reassured this isn’t just rebuffed with a snort and a pat phrase (as if I’m being silly and it hasn’t been the attitude before and then that’s what happened so it deserves to be guarded against and properly thought about)
I’m not sure and would like detail too when the selling points of supposed ‘consistent definitions/measures’, sharing data and PPI - and i blinking hope proper ethics would be added if they are doing it that way (to stop coercion being a big thing with subjective stuff) - are being mentioned
These seem like things that don't need a hub or this structure to do? I.e. is it a bit of a red herring as these things don’t need whatever this structuring is?
And also I can see how they will need to tailor to the appropriate research anyway eg if the research is going to be in severe people it needs more severe, if it’s on those with definitive PEM of a certain type or wants to attract a demographic of more minorities then the ppi might be changing to reflect. I’d hope it wasn’t the same few people in all the same research anyway?
Has anyone looked really closely at this mental health plan and the detail of it and whether it really has been successful and genuinely made things more representative of the actual illnesses and the wider patient population? Before we copy something based on that - I haven’t heard anything groundbreaking from that area myself
what I do note as a question is that given/if it comes from mental health are we giving a massive head start to all the researchers and their departments/kingdoms who have had that one as their dress rehearsal to set up all their funding support and templates for proposals and probably rejigged themselves and ways of doing things to play the game and be first off the blocks in applying for the spoils or positions that outsiders might not notice are surprisingly powerful ? But you don’t notice until you’ve been through it all etc (sometimes a specific admin position or committee position holds a lot of weight that you only realise as you get experience of how the processes work)
and really do these things map over to an area we want and are just getting for the first time to start to finally focus on the objective stuff and the ‘hard data’ stuff rather than subjective behavioural more for so long
. I’m afraid I’m cynical that the two areas are that similar in what they need even if that might have apparently been ‘better than what was before’ for mental health (but I don’t even know that - as people hint, no one can bite the hand they might need food from)