The pathological blindspot of PACE enablers is scary
I listened to the broadcast and later read the transcript. Angela's prediction was correct afterall, it was a complete whitewash. Although we can't expect much from a routine radio broadcast on health topics, it was heavily biased and one sided. It did however provide some insight into how Sharpe and Horton view the PACE trial, and their disingenuous attitude towards the criticism. Still working on a response to the transcript, which I may post later if I think it adds anything not said already.
Ellen Goudsmit in particular has been complaining about the editorial bias of the Lancet for years, and after hearing Horton's comments on ABC Radio I would be very surprised if there was no editorial bias in the Lancet. On another thread, [
Zoe Mullan (Lancet) wrote to Angela Kennedy]: "
The trial received unanimous support from three clinical reviewers and a statistician." I guess this was the "endless rounds of peer review" that Horton alluded to on ABC Radio? If "three clinical reviewers and a *statistician*" were unable to spot the flaws and factual errors, then the reliability of the Lancet is in question.
Norman Swan on Twitter (thanks Dolphin):
- "Tomorrow's Health Report, good news on chronic fatigue but some patient groups don't like it: big time vilification."
- "Haven't broadcast this morning's show yet and already the ME lobby is on the attack! Incredible."
[Dolphin on Norman Swan's Twitter comments]: He seems to be completely unaware that he was the person who threw the first stone with his Tweet ("vilification") and link to the loaded website description.
Angela Kennedy wrote: He can't be that stupid though, surely? Or can he?
Sean wrote: Swan is definitely not stupid or naive about establishment politics.
Unfortunately this is a bad sign from Norman Swan. Almost all of the comments on the ABC website are pointing out serious flaws with the study which anyone can verify on their own, and he interprets these as "big time vilification" and "the ME lobby is on the attack". It suggests he hasn't even looked into any of the points raised by the comments, instead he seems to interpret and automatically dismiss all criticism as vilification without considering the possibility that what he calls the "ME lobby" have raised fundamental issues with the trial.
Esther12 wrote: Sadly - we've got to be aware of the position we're starting from. It's angry patients suspected of being mentally disturbed vs respected Professors. In any debate or discussion, the presumption will be that we are wrong and stupid.
Yes, this is a fundamental problem. Such appeals to authority are getting really ridiculous and now even promoting incompetence when obvious flaws and even factual errors are being ignored as a result.
Esther12 wrote:
Also - there are some CFS patients who will post things that are clearly wrong and stupid, whereas those speaking on behalf of Pace will all be professionals who will, at the very least, know how to present their wrong and stupid ideas in ways that sound plausible and respectable.
It's a really difficult situation to argue your way out of, when so many biases and prejudices are stacked up against us, and the issues are so very complicated that few people will be interested in taking the time to understand them - better to just trust the experts!
True, but overall the comments on the ACB Radio website aren't bad. Swan probably hasn't even looked at them.
Angela Kennedy wrote: This doesn't mean we have to accept or take up positions of 'guilty' of those misrepresentations of the community and those concerns. These concerns, from the rejected letters, from the trail of critiques I have made since 2004, from the publication of the PACE trial identifier by One Click since 2004, from the critiques made by Hooper et al, are substantive and legitimate. People aren't making them for fun or to be crazy meanies. As there are currently no 'experts' in a position to protect people from the dangers of this fundamentally flawed trial, the community and it supporters (like Malcolm Hooper) have no option but to protect each other.
Well said.
Angela Kennedy wrote: Horton clearly did NOT know how to present a reasonable position. His prejudicial and inflammatory outburst on ABC should be one aspect of any grievance procedure around PACE and its publication.
Agreed. Horton was out of line and as far as I'm concerned he is now an accessory (to the "crime" of tolerating flaws and errors in the Lancet).
Angela Kennedy wrote: But, as Sean is alluding to, why would someone like Norman Swan, who apparently has a reputation for rigour and rationality (am I right there, Sean?) behave in such a way? His Twitter comments were asinine and mean, his programme a brown-nose to Horton and Sharpe, an attack on reasonable and substantive concerns. Has he allowed himself to be taken in by those attacking the patients, like Horton? This makes Swann naive at best (contrary to Sean's description). Or it means he's deliberately behaving unethically, whether by choice or compulsion. That's some pretty serious stuff on that programme. I know we, as a community, are used to being treated badly, to being misrepresented and bad-mouthed, but what was said on that programme was outrageous and unethical. Why was it allowed to happen, basically? Where is Norman Swan's intelligence and ethics and rigourous analysis?
Very good question. It really is incredible how blind, smug and glib the supporters or enablers of the PACE trial have been towards the criticism, our concerns are just dismissed without a second thought. What scares me is that the dismissal is now so entrenched that not only glaring flaws are tolerated but even factual errors are being ignored, while Horton can appear on a national radio broadcast feeling proud about the Lancet's "peer review process" of the PACE trial which clearly failed to do a proper job. How does the saying go, "pride before a fall"?
We as a community are not stupid, we can do fact checking and basic calculations if health permits. The peer preview process of the Lancet has been found wanting.
I looked up The Lancet on Wikipedia and it seems they are no stranger to controversy. Publication of the PACE trial was at least as bad as many of the examples given on Wikipedia.
Angela Kennedy wrote: Has anyone, by the way, read
Hooper's document? I have, I should say, twice. It's very substantive.
Horton says it is 43 pages, but the
word document I downloaded is 70 pages? Anyway, I have only skimmed through it so far, but from what I have seen so far, his document raises serious objections to the PACE trial which are worth considering. It covers the major issues and Horton or White et al are going to have a hard time responding to it. Calling it a "diatribe" from alleged fringe radicals in an attempt to discredit the arguments doesn't change the fact that we have a good case against PACE.
At this stage, White et al have the upper hand in terms of influence and audience, but they are on some pretty shaky ground. It is possible PACE will get away with publishing additional spin which general audiences will swallow again, but they have been forced to respond in the first place because their initial spin has been exposed; PACE responding with more spin won't fool the ME/CFS community. We now have access to the original document so we will know exactly how much cherry picking and spin has been put into the PACE response.
What would be ideal is: a full retraction (or at least a partial retraction?), an independent re-analysis, and an apology for providing ambiguous/misleading impressions to the news media press about patients getting back to "normal". I am still willing to accept that CBT/GET can on average have a relatively small effect on a minority of people diagnosed with Oxford criteria CFS, but I think in the fullness of time the PACE trial will eventually be exposed for what it really is, a colossal piece of spin which the Lancet either fell for or was complicitly involved with.
Angela Kennedy wrote: The undeserving sick quote needs to be looked in the context of the whole speech he gave.
Does anyone have the full speech?
Angela Kennedy wrote: One thing I've noticed is that Wessely and Sharpe both write and speak with frequent non-sequiturs.
And don't forgot the copious amounts of guilt by association, usually without making direct statements and leaving room for backpedaling. This would be like me going on about how psychiatry reeks of quackery, has a history of unproven ideology and a bad reputation for psychobabble, and out of all medical professions has the lowest rate of religious belief; then I would make no firm conclusion but finish up with saying how some of Wessely et al's views aren't supported by evidence and he doesn't attend church. Technically, I can still claim I was only speculating and never said directly that "Wessely is a godless quack" but it can be implied in the reader's imagination. That is the sort of writing style Wessely strikes me as having.
I think someone recently (maybe it was Angela?) commented somewhere that Wessely's style also seems to be laced with a subtle sarcasm. I think I agree with that assessment/suspicion.