Excellent letter, and amongst other things very educational. Education you really would hope Fiona Watt would have already acquired, and which she clearly thinks she does not need - but clearly does.That is a pretty uncompromising statement, indicating that she does not understand basic aspects of experimental design. She produces no arguments, relying on the fact that others thought PACE was OK.
The MRC are making complete fools of themselves internationally. Perhaps now is the time to copy on the forum the letter that I sent her a while back.
I consider this document now in the public domain and have no problem with it being copied elsewhere.
Published this morning:
CHRONIC FATIGUE
Sir, Further to your report “Call for review of ‘flawed’ ME research”(Aug 21), as funders of the Pace trial we reject the view that the scientific evidence provided by the trial for using cognitive behavioural theory and managed exercise in the treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome (also known as ME) was unsound. The Pace trial was funded following expert peer review, was overseen by an independent steering committee, and its published findings have also been independently peer-reviewed. Other research groups have drawn similar conclusions. Chronic fatigue syndrome/ME remains a priority for the Medical Research Council (MRC), and it is important that researchers are not discouraged from working on the disease because of concerns that they could be subject to the level of hostility that Pace researchers have experienced. Medical research can only flourish when there is mutual respect between all parties.
Professor Fiona Watt Executive chairwoman, Medical Research Council
Statisticians seem to be quite good at missing problems with PACE methodology because they are as much psychological as mathematical
Published this morning:
CHRONIC FATIGUE
Sir, Further to your report “Call for review of ‘flawed’ ME research”(Aug 21), as funders of the Pace trial we reject the view that the scientific evidence provided by the trial for using cognitive behavioural theory and managed exercise in the treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome (also known as ME) was unsound. The Pace trial was funded following expert peer review, was overseen by an independent steering committee, and its published findings have also been independently peer-reviewed. Other research groups have drawn similar conclusions. Chronic fatigue syndrome/ME remains a priority for the Medical Research Council (MRC), and it is important that researchers are not discouraged from working on the disease because of concerns that they could be subject to the level of hostility that Pace researchers have experienced. Medical research can only flourish when there is mutual respect between all parties.
Professor Fiona Watt Executive chairwoman, Medical Research Council
??????????
I think by this @Jonathan Edwards means the problems with the trial are very much around the embedded psychology within it, whereas the statisticians are much more likely to pick up on the straight mathematical problems, without fully appreciating the problems with the psychology.??????????
This of course is very true, but unfortunately overlooks the obvious - respect has to be earned, not doled out on demand. The PACE authors and BPS crew simply have not earned that respect unfortunately, all they ever seem to do is demand it.Fiona Watt said:Medical research can only flourish when there is mutual respect between all parties.
Yes, I was taught that long time back. Reader comprehension drops off rapidly once a sentence exceeds a certain length, no matter how good its content. Much better to break down into shorter ones. If you really think it doesn't quite work, then semi-colons can sometimes help if used sparingly.Edit: IIRC, journalists are trained to write sentences not much over 25 words, for ease of reading. Here's why:
This of course is very true, but unfortunately overlooks the obvious - respect has to be earned, not doled out on demand. The PACE authors and BPS crew simply have not earned that respect unfortunately, all they ever seem to do is demand it.
Jesus wept.
Thanks everyone for the input. This now is the final version. If anyone wants me to add their name, please say so and in what form.
Oh b*gger, missed it. In truth my qualifications are extremely modest by comparison with many here, so would likely have diluted rather than reinforced.Thanks again everyone for the input. In light of the comment from @dave30th and others, this is the final, final version:
Sir,
We are surprised by Professor Watt's wholehearted and inaccurate defence of the PACE trial.
Questions have been raised about the independence of both the trial steering committee and the peer-review, and the speed with which the main paper was fast-tracked by The Lancet. The small trials that have found similar results to PACE repeated its major flaws - notably being unblinded studies with subjective primary outcome measures.
When data from the trial have been reanalysed, no convincing evidence has been found for the claims the interventions are effective. The trial findings have been rejected by scientists and statisticians from around the world, every government health agency in the USA and in debate in Parliament. Berkeley University now use it as an example of how not to conduct research.
Justified criticism of a flawed and poorly conducted trial should not be confused with hostility to the researchers.
There are many questions raised by this massive failure, not least about the MRC's own role in the trial and the competence of its system of peer-review.
I'll send it off at 19:00 UK time, so if anyone wants to add their name, please let me know before then.
Exactly.Whether campaigning against PACE is legitimate or misguided depends on whether PACE is good or bad research.
There is nothing bad about admitting that we are campaigning against PACE, or campaigning against the notion that ME/CFS can be reversed by changing thoughts and engaging in graded exercise.
Oh b*gger, missed it. In truth my qualifications are extremely modest by comparison with many here, so would likely have diluted rather than reinforced.
I can't help wondering whether the fact that she's based at King's College has any relevance. As we know, King's is a hotbed of BPS, with, among others, Professors Simon Wessely, Trudie Chalder, and Rona Moss-Morris.
This is the route we are going and why there is such cognitive dissonance.@dave30th
would any of your letter's signatories be prepared to resign this? Or could you round up a new letter
would any MPs be prepared to sign this?
Can we tweet once posted to maximise exposure
I think to gain as much traction signatures need to come from outside the " ME bubble"
The stance is somewhat understandable as if this falls , then the basis for the IAPT roll out to MUS falls with it, and from what I have seen, this is an opportunity for third party private companies to maximise profit.