Yeah, sadly in the modern world, unless you're very lucky, you may not have much help with day to day tasks. Mum's parents are probably still working themselves, if they're still around.
Life as a new Mum must be a blooming nightmare with covid, especially if you've got some additional...
I would say they appear to hold sway. Lots of people read who don't tweet. Shouting loudest & being an a**e may appear to win them the twitter argument but to people who know them in real life? Real risk of alienating people important to them & never realizing.
Amazing how many people who...
Lovely.
Speaking as a woman who has never given birth.
You have your C - section, which while routine is still fairly major surgery. Your bundle of joy (who is also probably extremely hard work and needing to lifted regularly for feeding and nappy changes and so forth) safely delivered...
This is a heart sink tweet if ever I heard one. I say this as a fan of yoga - though I have been unable to physically practice asanas for a long time now.
The old, I did it while recovering from cancer it was wonderful.......
I've heard this said about so many things. Just because someone...
Edit - cross posted with Kalliope - referring to
Hmmm....
Not bad but the article makes it sound a bit as though ME is recognised now and the discrimination is a thing of the past. We wish.
Also that ME was first reported 40 years ago. I doubt this is true. For example I know of fellow ME...
Compared to many of the people who replied to the thread I would class my breathlessness as occasional and mildish.
It doesn't happen all the time to me. So I could go for a walk tomorrow and struggle (especially if walking up a slope) but next week I could do the same walk at a similar speed...
I think you both have a point.
Yes, we do need to treat others kindly and supportively whether they are newly ill with covid or ME or whatever. It is a frightening time and extremely stressful time with a steep learning curve. It's also a time when you are most likely to be kicked in the...
I remember when I was first diagnosed the whole cold showers and baths thing was still kicking around for ME patients.
My consultant mentioned it one day, commenting it's one thing for a healthy person in summer but for a sick person.....and also that as some patients were so desperate to get...
One of the problems I noticed when I first became ill was when swimming. At the time I didn't put this down to breathing but maybe it is a factor now that I'm thinking about it from that angle.
Pre ME I used to happy swim about 50 length of a 25 metre pool in about 45- 50 minutes. The limit...
Yep. This is what I find. Don't allow your breathing to become laboured.
On the occasions I manage to join my husband & dog on their walks, if they disappear off up a slope, I just plod, taking my time. How long it takes is determined by my breathing & I don't allow it to become the other...
Good question - no, it doesn't always or necessarily feel like out of breath the way it would because I'd been running too hard when well for example.
When I was a kid I had asthma. Sometimes it happened at school. I would just slide down a wall and sit on the floor, wheezing horribly, unable...
Arguably, if they had taken it seriously in the first place many of those chronically ill adults might be productive if an effective treatment, if not cure, had been found.
Compared to the potential cost to economies world wide of long covid it might well prove a seriously expensive mistake.
Well Jo Daniels, no, we don't know what works for ME/CFS because there's been naff all by way of decent quality research.
On the other hand we do know what doesn't work & that is CBT & GET. By CBT I specifically mean the directive CBT inflicted on many ME patients. Which CBT do you mean, as...
I have had spells where I became very breathless a lot more easily than usual. I tended to put it down to my underactive thyroid and/or anaemia.
However, there have been times when this has happened when, to the best of my knowledge, my thyroid hormone & iron levels are as good as they get...
It'll be interesting to see if the psychs make the usual mistake of assuming that a patient who is stressed because they have long covid, with all that entails, develops long covid because they were stressed.
Edit - victim of autocorrect
Maybe I'm being even more of a cynical curmudgeon than usual today but......
Yippee something new let's develop.a guideline. Don't you first need to data gather, observe and understand it?
I get that you want to do something to ease suffering and improve outcomes for people while you gather...
Sure but it's still wildly inaccurate. Lots of diseases that can be tested for and where severity can be physically assessed by tests later on in the disease can't always be seen or don't show obvious signs in the early stages.
By all means use shorthand but they could at least aim for...
Subjective health complaints - interesting term.
Ultimately, aren't all health complaints subjective?
We can only experience them through our own perception and the same symptom could have different effects on different people. Difficulty walking might be more of a factor in employment for a...
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