biophile
Places I'd rather be.
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[EDIT: responding to this post by Sasha]
http://forums.phoenixrising.me/inde...draft-report-is-out.34480/page-19#post-538147
Good stuff.
Rehabilitative CBT/GET is like a spintop which only remains upright on the table because of ongoing spin. It is good that the IOM/P2P as newcomers saw through some of the spin and are openly questioning whether it is actually rehabilitative.
I think coping-style psychotherapies and activity management in the form of pacing do need more research. These could be researched further without the patronizing (mis)guidance and presumptions we get from rehabilitative therapies e.g. CBT. Rehabilitative GET is another house of cards that is usually ineffectual and often dangerous in the real world outside clinical trials which either set the bar for harm pretty high (much higher than improvement) or don't even bother to measure individual adverse effects (preferring group average scores or dropouts instead).
Proponents should finally present evidence that CBT/GET are actually rehabilitating objectively or stop presenting it as such. If there is any useful component to it which helps a fraction of loosely defined cases, then it is their responsibility to find out what that component is and who these patients are. Stop generalizing to the maximum number of patients to find only a few that benefit ie about 1 in 7 at best before considering the minimal thresholds used, selection or recruitment bias, response or reporting biases, the gap between clinical trials and clinical practice, and the lack of improvements to objective outcomes.
Nonblinded trials which encourage the active group to think the treatment they receive is safe and powerful at reversing their pathophysiology are simply not very high quality no matter how many spin doctors you have, and again, it is good to see that the IOM/P2P have acknowledged some of these blatantly obvious problems.
I also think limited BPS research can be OK if it is methodologically sound, not ideologically based and/or spun, and not at the expense of more important biomedical research. Unfortunately this is almost never the case. Proper research in this area would help to debunk the poor quality conclusions we have had to endure so far, and may find something actually useful.
With respect to PEM, PACE claim that CBT/GET helps PEM because less patients reported PEM after CBT/GET. Their measurement of PEM is however suspect (CDC PEM is pretty vague compared to ICC/CCC PENE and they did not use the CDC criteria properly anyway), and the groups reporting less PEM were told that PEM doesn't really exist in the same manner which patients think it does. CBT/GET has never been conducted on a CCC or ICC cohort, let alone using actometers on such a cohort. There are ethical concerns with conducting such studies and I especially can't bring myself to promote further GET trials even if properly conducted. I would certainly find the results interesting whatever the outcome but I just can't willingly recommend fellow patients go into a battle which seems pointless and potentially dangerous.
Yeah. I cringe at the idea of being greeted by another random ignorant (but usually well meaning) physician who grins like a village idiot after reading about CBT/GET or alternative medicine and talks about my supposedly-optimistic prognosis.
Good start anyway.
http://forums.phoenixrising.me/inde...draft-report-is-out.34480/page-19#post-538147
1. The cost to the US economy isn't $1bn, it's around 20 times that (we have references).
2. There needs to be a call for funds commensurate with that economic burden that is on the same scale as funding for a disease of comparable severity (MS) (we have figures).
3. It's great that the Oxford criteria should be retired.
Good stuff.
4. CBT and GET: there isn't evidence of modest benefit, and PACE should be rejected - it's based on the Oxford criteria and heavily flawed.
5. GET is harmful - references to 'fear of harm' should be removed.
6. Further BPS research is positively not wanted by patients, including more research on CBT.
Rehabilitative CBT/GET is like a spintop which only remains upright on the table because of ongoing spin. It is good that the IOM/P2P as newcomers saw through some of the spin and are openly questioning whether it is actually rehabilitative.
I think coping-style psychotherapies and activity management in the form of pacing do need more research. These could be researched further without the patronizing (mis)guidance and presumptions we get from rehabilitative therapies e.g. CBT. Rehabilitative GET is another house of cards that is usually ineffectual and often dangerous in the real world outside clinical trials which either set the bar for harm pretty high (much higher than improvement) or don't even bother to measure individual adverse effects (preferring group average scores or dropouts instead).
Proponents should finally present evidence that CBT/GET are actually rehabilitating objectively or stop presenting it as such. If there is any useful component to it which helps a fraction of loosely defined cases, then it is their responsibility to find out what that component is and who these patients are. Stop generalizing to the maximum number of patients to find only a few that benefit ie about 1 in 7 at best before considering the minimal thresholds used, selection or recruitment bias, response or reporting biases, the gap between clinical trials and clinical practice, and the lack of improvements to objective outcomes.
Nonblinded trials which encourage the active group to think the treatment they receive is safe and powerful at reversing their pathophysiology are simply not very high quality no matter how many spin doctors you have, and again, it is good to see that the IOM/P2P have acknowledged some of these blatantly obvious problems.
I also think limited BPS research can be OK if it is methodologically sound, not ideologically based and/or spun, and not at the expense of more important biomedical research. Unfortunately this is almost never the case. Proper research in this area would help to debunk the poor quality conclusions we have had to endure so far, and may find something actually useful.
With respect to PEM, PACE claim that CBT/GET helps PEM because less patients reported PEM after CBT/GET. Their measurement of PEM is however suspect (CDC PEM is pretty vague compared to ICC/CCC PENE and they did not use the CDC criteria properly anyway), and the groups reporting less PEM were told that PEM doesn't really exist in the same manner which patients think it does. CBT/GET has never been conducted on a CCC or ICC cohort, let alone using actometers on such a cohort. There are ethical concerns with conducting such studies and I especially can't bring myself to promote further GET trials even if properly conducted. I would certainly find the results interesting whatever the outcome but I just can't willingly recommend fellow patients go into a battle which seems pointless and potentially dangerous.
7. We need treatment specialists, not random 'physicians'.
8. We positively don't want research on bizarre and useless complementary therapies such as homoeopathy, mind-body medicine and 'multimodal' ('spiritual') therapies.
Yeah. I cringe at the idea of being greeted by another random ignorant (but usually well meaning) physician who grins like a village idiot after reading about CBT/GET or alternative medicine and talks about my supposedly-optimistic prognosis.
There was more stuff to praise than I've listed, which I want to add in.
Good start anyway.
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