| > This shows a lack of empathy. Well, now you are attacking my humanity. It's very difficult to have constructive dialog about these issues when individuals attack the speaker, and not what's being said. We are talking about public health policy, which necessarily glosses over individual patients who are suffering and aggregates them into cold, sterile statistics in order to make decisions that are best for society. It's not particularly compassionate, but it's unavoidable if you want resource allocation to be proportional to need. > like you, deny the severity of the problem This is a straw man argument, where you take a crummy version of my argument and knock it down. "Severity" is not the word I used. I said "level of need", which is different because it takes severity (magnitude) and frequency into account. Progeria is a devastating (severe) disease, but it's also exceptionally uncommon. From a public health standpoint, both are an important part of determining the level of need, and therefore the level of support that these problems receive. > how would they hear about this trial from the internet, where the conventional doctors you are assailing created clinicaltrials.gov in order to make such information accessible to everybody. > But the main reason is that patients don't need the trial, Lyme communities are full of people taking disulfiram on their own and finally recovering. Nothing makes us happier than when our patients are connected with effective treatments. Nevertheless, the publications you site appear to lack random assignment, placebo control, or a double blind. Therefore I find the data uncompelling, even as I am happy to see that there is a trial for it; I hope it includes these three elements which make the results most meaningful. Absent that study it remains possible that disulfuram will be the miracle cure you claim that it is, but I'm not expecting that to happen, and I suspect that chronic lyme will be a topic on HN in another 9 months exactly because the needle hasn't moved far enough. Please prove me wrong! That's how big breakthroughs are made! (witness h pylori infection and gastric ulcers). But please excuse me if I don't hold my breath for the announcement, and advocate more more conventional research during that time. |