Kitty
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
They need to be asked how many of the people they rehabbed maintained the improvements at six, 12 and 24 months. (Presumably they know this; people need follow-up, just as they say in their document.)now we have an 'its called rehab so it must make people better not harm them and make them worse' fallacy being dog-whistled
And how many people who completed their therapy returned to work, study, or whatever they were doing before they became ill, and maintained it as six, 12 and 24 months.
And how many of the people they rehabbed saw no improvement.
And how many got worse.
Until we've got that data, no one can decide whether the approach has merit. It's the absolute minimum evidence needed.