Hello IVI
Originally Posted by insearchof
My statement is not attacking the man, but the statement attributed to him.
In which case it might have helped if you hadn't written "Dangerous and premature words from this man" which does rather read as an attack on the person, not the words.
I refer to my last post. I maintain the
words are both premature and dangerous. You IVI, can choose to read into it, what ever you like.
Usual practice is to achieve ‘proof’ of affirmation by repeated observation under all applicable conditions. It is the lack of repeated observation that denies proof of Lombardi et al
Yes, proof of affirmation by
repeated observation etc, another way of saying what I said. But the fat lady, isnt even close to warming up in the wings yet IVI. And until she sings, the argument of infection in a reasonably substantial number of CFS patient remains on the table, much to the distaste of the negative camp.
But no one ‘knows’ in any meaningful sense, whether the WPI test actually identifies anything let alone something that may be a pathogen
This has been addressed ad nauseum all over this forum and others and I dont have the time, energy or inclination to bore every one here with the counter position or add to the sites current demands for space on its servers. If your late to the proceedings and are not familiar with the arguments, may I suggest you use the search function? This is reminiscent of the Towers/Welcome Trust position - so try searching for that. Or pehaps your already familiar with it?
Even if in the very remote chance that XMRV is an active pathogen, there is no basis to argue for its role across a large part of the global M.E/CFS population. What Shepherd has written is wholly unremarkable, it’s simply a cautionary position accepted by 99% of medical professionals.
Your statements is as premature as the one I commented on:
'' Even if there is a remote chance that XMRV is an active pathogen'' the science is just warming up and yet here you are questioning pathogenisis and raising remoteness,: premature.
He maintains that CFS is not caused by XMRV and therefore anti retrovirals are not the answer.
Bacterial infections are not the cause of CFS either, but are treated.
Yes, bacteria causes infection, is a disease and justifies treatment on current scientific premises.
XMRV has not found to cause disease in humans, but has been shown to do so in other mammals.
Clinical trials employing anti retroviral’s and patients subsequent response to lower levels of XMRV might go a long way to bridging the gap. Stronger calls for this from patient advocates must be made.
To say, however, and what’s more on the basis of a gut feeling, that XMRV science will not prove to be the cause of CFS –is as others have pointed out – unscientific.
To say this whilst science is progressing, is premature.
To go further and then add when science is unsettled and one is referencing nothing more than ones gut feeling, that anti retrovirals are therefore not the answer, is premature and dangerous.
It is dangerous, because it is not based on settled science and statements of this nature – that go unchallenged, may have the effect of closing down the discussion – and that is especially dangerous and premature - not only for the health of thousands of chronically ill persons with CFS - but for a substantial proportion of the healthy populace who may also be infected.
I doubt that 99% of the medical profession would step out and make such a statement of the ilk he did, when they know science in this area remains unsettled. It is one thing to advise caution in the use of anti retro viral drugs, - but that can be said quite clearly.
The problem here is it appears that he went beyond that.
For more dangerous and premature words: Living With M.E
How on earth is this relevant?