This, in an editorial in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research:
@cassava7 - perhaps there is something here that could contribute to your IQWIG submission?
We found the presentation by Dr. Relton disturbing on multiple grounds. This admission of unethical behavior calls her scientific
integrity into question. The premise for her actions rests on an errant assumption widespread among clinicians, based on anecdotal experi ence, that one possesses an ultimate knowledge of what works and doesn’t work without the need for rigorous study. The history of medicine, unfortunately, has been littered by countless treatments that practitioners believed in and dispensed, only to be later found not beneficial or even harmful [4]. This underscores the importance of rigorous study for treatments where equipoise exists in the scientific community, as it arguably did for the use of homeopathy for chronic fatigue syndrome.
Reporting on the integrity of the blind has merit and is especially valuable when dealing with subjective outcomes for which there is a greater risk of bias due to any unblinding [12]. Un-blinded assessors of subjective binary outcomes may exaggerate odds ratios by an average of 36% [13]. Subjective outcomes are frequently used in studies that fall within this journal’s scope, at the interface of psychology and medicine. We recommend assessing the integrity of the blind for any clinical trial, particularly those utilizing subjective outcomes akin to the primary outcomes of the Weatherley-Jones et al. study in question.
@cassava7 - perhaps there is something here that could contribute to your IQWIG submission?