Jonathan Edwards
"Gibberish"
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I guess that brings us to the point that the test for Lyme disease are very controversial. I guess it's up to the individual clinician to determine those "available pointers"? And as patients, what are we to do? Most of us don't have the technical expertise to determine if these tests are valid or not no matter how much research we do on it. So we are left with the question, "how much do we trust the clinician" and how much money do we have available to spend on this possible search down a rat hole.
To me, it still seems to be a roll of the dice dependent also on how much time and money we have to spend on the problem.
Dear Voner,
I appreciate that. But in general a test is only worth taking treatment on if it is something that major labs can agree on and check for quality control by swapping samples blinded. Beyond that lab tests are so easily overinterpreted that I would steer well clear. I understand that people want answers but there is no use in an answer that is based on junk.
Maybe the best way to judge what to do is to do exactly what we are doing now - exchange sceptical ideas about tests and treatments and see where the margins of knowledge are.
And to do that on an open and equal basis I think it helps if we keep away from veiled references like 'some people do not seem to understand' (and this is NOT a veiled reference to you). Real scientific discussion comes from politely addressing each other in the first person!!! It is from frank argument like this that all my own successes in research derived, and however much one person thought someone else was stupid we had a rule that you responded directly in the first person and politely. The real breakthroughs came when someone realised that the other person might not be so stupid after all.