Trial By Error: Lightning Process Star Complains About NICE; Struthers Nudges Cochrane to Keep Up

By David Tuller, DrPH

Another Anti-Science Campaigner Takes Aim at NICE

The anti-science zealots do not give up easily. Now Live Landmark, the Norwegian Lightning Process practitioner, has written an opinion piece blasting the new evidence-based guidelines for ME/CFS from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). I assume she is not just upset that the document bars standard interventions like graded exercise therapy (GET) and a form of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) but that it also specifically bars the Lightning Process (LP), her personal specialty.

Landmark and her comrades in the GET/CBT/LP ideological brigades have been humiliated publicly by NICE, so it is understandable that they are throwing tantrums–even one as divorced from reality as this article. Landmark’s arguments can’t be taken seriously–except perhaps by those whose core financial and reputational interests are threatened by NICE’s in-depth analysis of the deficiencies of the evidence.

Here’s what Landmark opines: “Unfortunately, the recommendations made in the new NICE guidelines for chronic fatigue were not based on the published research. This means that the Norwegian Directorate of Health can be confident in ignoring their suggestions.”

The NICE decisions were based on the fact that the evidence in support of the interventions was found to be of poor quality. Landmark might not agree with that assessment and she might prefer her own country’s health authorities to dismiss it as unwarranted. But she can’t rewrite what happened, nor should the Norwegian Directorate of Health pay attention to her rant. The recommendations against CBT, GET and LP were based on the dramatic shortcomings of the research, which NICE outlined in voluminous detail.

Psychologist Brian Hughes, a professor at the National University of Ireland, Galway, dismantles much of Landmark’s argument in this twitter thread.

Amazingly, at this late date, Landmark links to the 2011 Lancet publication of the PACE trial as if it offers legitimate evidence and hasn’t been widely debunked in academic and professional quarters, and not just by NICE. She also links to the PACE team’s reprise in a just-published paper called–without a hint of irony–€œEvidence€‘Based Care for People with Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis.” In this self-justifying whine, Professors Michael Sharpe, Trudie Chalder and Peter White, the three lead PACE investigators, insist that criticism of their work reflects a big misunderstanding on the part of everyone else. Citing these two articles does not bolster Landmark’s credibility or the case she is trying to make.

I guess it’s been a disappointing year for Landmark, given that Norwegian research ethics authorities rejected her long-gestating proposed trial of the LP for ME/CFS patients, a project she was pursuing as part of a doctoral program in psychology. The ethics authorities determined that the study was likely to generate biased results and that Landmark’s role was fraught with conflicts of interest. Although Landmark fancies herself an expert whose opinions on research should be shared, this official assessment of her work doesn’t induce confidence that she is qualified to pass judgment on or even assess NICE’s methodology.

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Caroline Struthers Renews Pressure on Cochrane

In recent years, Caroline Struthers, who describes herself on twitter as €œa serial ‘healthy control’ research participant, citizen scientist, and patient-directed research enthusiast, has politely but rigorously nudged Cochrane to take appropriate steps with regards to its problematic reviews of exercise and cognitive behavior therapy for what it has called CFS. The exercise review in particular has been a controversial document, and the saga has taken multiple twists and turns that are too complicated to enumerate here.

Struthers has posted her various missives about Cochrane on her blog, Healthycontrol.org. Because she understands the details of Cochrane’s processes, she knows how to frame the arguments for maximum leverage and impact. Last month, Struthers sent another well-constructed and cogent letter to Cochrane, triggered by recent developments involving NICE.

Here’s what she wrote on her blog:

On 26 November 2021 I wrote to Toby Lasserson, Cochrane’s Deputy Editor-in-Chief, copying in in Gill Leng the Chief Executive Officer of NICE. My letter was prompted by the announcement that NICE and Cochrane have signed collaborative agreement. Among a few other issues, I am seeing reassurance that NICE will manage the risk posed by potentially delegating important decisions about the quality of evidence influencing NICE’s recommendations to an outside, self-regulated organisation.

It is important to hold organizations to account when they fall short of expectations, as Cochrane has in how it has handled these two published reviews. Until recently, it had allowed the GET/CBT ideological brigades full authority over how the illness was handled. That has changed. In her latest letter, Struthers is appropriately asking Cochrane to clean up after itself and keep up with developments, among other requests. You can read it here.

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