Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Does a similar argument also apply to GET? What solid evidence was there that encouraging people to repeatedly ignore their bodies' natural safety warnings was in fact safe, especially when the underlying physical problem was only assumed to be deconditioning. The PACE paper tacitly acknowledged that the true disease mechanism was not understood with any real certainty. As per my post #95.
The argument is similar for GET but may not be quite so watertight. For GET the therapist can simply say that they think the patient may improve if they give exercise a try. CBT is different in that it explicitly takes the position that the patient has incorrect beliefs that need to be changed by education, and that education may involve 'cognitive strategies' which effectively means using persuasion techniques as in brainwashing.