Having just been in a pretty intense 3 days of the science of ME/CFS, it was shocking to me to see an article still reporting that there's a big debate about PACE. The debates at the science meetings were about autoantibodies and gene expression, et al! It seems to me that maybe in the UK people are so used to being in a country where they are mostly denied medical care for their disease, told it's "false illness beliefs", advised by persons in authority to exercise, which makes them worse, and being spoken to with sarcasm, disdain, and patronization, that any small mention of the "debate" that includes a mention of science seems like a "balanced" article.
Janet, I agree with a lot of this. And we share the same goal: that one day, the proponents of the exercise 'therapies' based on deeply flawed trials will be seen as no better than faith healers who berate their unresponsive patients for not believing enough. The question is how we get there, given that in the UK we have been portrayed as aggressive, angry, violent psychopaths. To turn that ship around will take patience and political savvy. It also means, IMHO, celebrating small victories along the way.
And this article, to me, is a victory. I've gone back and re-read it again, to check that I'm not some cowed ME patient begging for scraps from the establishment. To me, it's quietly damning:
- It acknowledges (dumb headline aside) that this is no longer patients vs doctors, but an argument within the scientific community.
- Reanalysis of the data shows PACE inflated results.
- BPS proponents have accused patients of being 'borderline psychopaths' and spent huge sums of money trying to prevent trial data being handed over.
- Claims of abuse were shown to be nonsense during the Tribunal.
- The 'rebuttal' by Simon Wessely is massively unconvincing.
- There is good immunological data looking at cytokines.
- There is a promising trial into Rituximab.
Does it include absolutely everything I would like? No, but I would like this journalist to keep investigating, keep writing about ME/CFS and PACE and potential new treatments. We need journalists like him who will at least hear our side of the story (and, from the story's framing, take our side) so I worry that if we are overly critical we risk losing a friendly voice.
(That doesn't mean we don't highlight inconsistencies and errors where they occur - but charm works better than anger. Dismissing any journalist that doesn't instantly write a 10,000 word expose on the barbarism of GET, I fear, gets us further from, not nearer to, our goal).
Let's take our victories where we get them.