New piece from The Mirror
BBC Dragons' Den faces new backlash over 'upsetting' claims ME sufferers have 'negative mindset' - Mirror Online #MEmirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/drag…
I've read this morning that the BBC say that the Dragons do due diligence after the programme. Can the Minister of Common Sense please explain to them that it's too late at that point as the damage will/has already been done! #ME#MEAwareness#DragonsDen
We have some momentum building thanks to the articles by @HollieAnneB and @iEllieFry. Journalist @KerriLWatt who also has #MyalgicEncephalomyelitis is ready & willing to help our voices be heard. What a powerhouse they could be. Feeling hopeful change is in the air. #pwME#MECFS
The Executive Board of @NHSEngland could instruct someone to remove inaccurate information from the NHS webpage on ME/CFS and replace it with accurate information based on, say, the CDC's updated guidance. It would be easy to do. I will do it for them today for free if they want.
Medicine really needs a #MeToo reckoning. #MedicalMisogny has trivialised the experience of #ME sufferers & long held back research, resulting in the continued suffering of 1000s & the ill-preparedness for #LC.
Change is desperately needed. #MyalgicEncephalomyelitis
Have agonised over whether @thetimes should have published yet more of retired anaesthetist Peter Hilton’s odious views. There could be no better illustration of the entrenched misogyny in certain crusty corners of the NHS. It had to be seen to be believed. Repulsive.
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Are there any Psychologists or Psychological Academics here amongst my friends who understand that M.E #MEcfs is a complex, serious, biomedical condition & would be willing to lend their support to patients with M.E. by adding their signature to a group letter❓
Over 2,200 signatures! Thank you so much to everybody who has signed and shared our petition calling on Cochrane to withdraw their harmful 2019 review of Exercise therapy for 'CFS'.
3,000 today? Please continue sharing and signing.
#MECFS#CochraneLondonchange.org/p/cochrane-withdr…
Potentially useful survey - but doesn’t want the views of women over 55
All that experience of reproductive health is apparently not important or needed at all- even in respect of menopause
Utterly bizarre @mariacaulfield@SteveBarclay - please address
gov.uk/government/news/landm…
Just to put this into perspective…
The govt spent £500m of our money on a field hospital that treated a few hundred people
They could have spent it on the NHS and we would still be treating thousands!
Govt will do anything to avoid supporting the NHS
mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/ho…
The Times again pushing a dangerous narrative on disability benefits.
This time Matthew Parris getting horribly confused about PIP (an extra costs payment NOT an out of work benefit)
thetimes.co.uk/article/menta…
Totally irresponsible for that Matthew Parris benefits piece in the Times to be so uninformed & inaccurate:
-PIP has nothing to do with your ability to work
-It isn't more generous than its predecessor
-It isn't comparable to Jobseekers Allowance (which barely exists now anyway)
ALT Quote from Matthew Parries piece in the Times reading: Ten years ago, the Conservative-led government brought in a new way for the state to support those whose ability to work was hampered by physical or mental disability. It was called the personal independence payment (PIP) and was simpler and more generous than the allowance it replaced. It can also pay (depending on circumstance) notably more than jobseeker’s allowance.
Post-exertional malaise—the cardinal symptom of ME/CFS—is distinct & worse. Less a symptom than a physiological state. After gentle physical/mental activity, your batteries aren’t drained but missing entirely. PEM is the annihilation of possibility. 4/ theatlantic.com/health/archi…
ALT Post-exertional malaise, or PEM, is the defining trait of ME/CFS and a common feature of long COVID. It is often portrayed as an extreme form of fatigue, but it is more correctly understood as a physiological state in which all existing symptoms burn more fiercely and new ones ignite. Beyond fatigue, people who get PEM might also feel intense radiant pain, an inflammatory burning feeling, or gastrointestinal and cognitive problems: “You feel poisoned, flu-ish, concussed,” Misko said. And where fatigue usually sets in right after exertion, PEM might strike hours or days later, and with disproportionate ferocity. Even gentle physical or mental effort might lay people out for days, weeks, months. Visiting a doctor can precipitate a crash, and so can filling out applications for disability benefits—or sensing bright lights and loud sounds, regulating body temperature on hot days, or coping with stress. And if in fatigue your batteries feel drained, in PEM they’re missing entirely. It’s the
ALT Medical professionals generally don’t learn about PEM during their training. Many people doubt its existence because it is so unlike anything that healthy people endure. Mary Dimmock told me that she understood what it meant only when she saw her son, Matthew, who has ME/CFS, crash in front of her eyes. “He just melted,” Dimmock said. But most people never see such damage because PEM hides those in the midst of it from public view. And because it usually occurs after a delay, people who experience PEM might appear well to friends and colleagues who then don’t witness the exorbitant price they later pay.
When long-haulers talk about their fatigue, they often hear “Oh I’m tired too”. But theirs is utterly different to the everyday version healthy people get. More severe. Very hard to push through (& costly if you try). Not cured by sleep. Multifaceted. 3/ theatlantic.com/health/archi…
ALT Fatigue is among the most common and most disabling of long COVID’s symptoms, and a signature of similar chronic illnesses such as myalgic encephalomyelitis (also known as chronic fatigue syndrome or ME/CFS). But in these diseases, fatigue is so distinct from everyday weariness that most of the people I have talked with were unprepared for how severe, multifaceted, and persistent it can be.
For a start, this fatigue isn’t really a single symptom; it has many faces. It can weigh the body down: Lisa Geiszler likens it to “wearing a lead exoskeleton on a planet with extremely high gravity, while being riddled with severe arthritis.” It can rev the body up: Many fatigued people feel “wired and tired,” paradoxically in fight-or-flight mode despite being utterly depleted. It can be cognitive: Thoughts become sluggish, incoherent, and sometimes painful—like “there’s steel wool stuck in my frontal lobe,” Gwynn Dujardin, a literary historian with ME, told me.
ALT And though normal fatigue is temporary and amenable to agency—even after a marathon, you can will yourself into a shower, and you’ll feel better after sleeping—rest often fails to cure the fatigue of long COVID or ME/CFS. “I wake up fatigued,” Letícia Soares, who has long COVID, told me.
Fatigue is different from everyday tiredness, Ed Yong writes, and much of American society and the American medical establishment has trouble understanding it. bit.ly/3OzZV5S
🎨: María Medem
Wholly damaging article by @guardian#PwME don't have 'sensitivities' to our disease being treated as psychogenic, we know from scientific literature that it isn't. Report on biomedical research as you did two days ago. Stop enabling our abuse. People have died. #MyE
ALT Screenshot of the Guardian article postulating that the nice guideline for me is flawed.
Claiming that "Services are no longer able to provide a full range of evidence-based therapeutic interventions" & that "research evidence base for (CBT & GET) therapies had “strengthened, not weakened” since the 2007 guideline" is untrue.
->
Have a word with @GeorgeMonbiot - x.com/GeorgeMonbiot/status/1…
he already covered this for you and concluded that it is "one of the greatest medical scandals of this century"
1. There’s an aspect of this story that I didn’t have space for in the column. This is about how the scientific and media establishment closed ranks around bad science, defending it from legitimate questioning and criticism.