In the first 6 months to a year? Sure. Whatever. Literally the barest minimum expected. Still terrible, all things considered, when the entire point of experts is that they can understand and act faster, preferably in advance. Being able to predict and prepare in advance is basically the best of...
Yup. It's time to say it: medicine isn't learning and has miserably failed the test. It's just not happening. A few good apples out there, but still barely enough to fill a school gymnasium.
We keep hearing from friendly doctors that everyone they know who works in healthcare thinks it's BS...
It's obviously not. But since PACE is the meat of this eminence-based evidence, they feel the need to defend it. Of course it's always an issue. It's even a common issue, this is why even the most fervent promoters of psychosomatics will dismiss any study featuring this flaw where they don't...
It's the bad kind. There is no need to ask the experience of illness because the experience of illness is known and it's bad. This is trying to deflect from the illness and onto identity and other useless stuff, putting as #1 the mind-body connection is a big tell that the researchers directed...
Well at least one useful thing is the confirmation by another health authority that almost all BPS research on ME is of such terrible quality that it shouldn't be used. It's so bad, in fact, that it obviously should end, considering that after decades they are all basically identically bad, all...
This doesn't give it enough credit. We've known this for decades, but in the case of long haulers, on the whole they understand this within months at most. Complete amateurs, most with no medical training, understand in a matter of months what medicine is still incapable of understanding after...
It still makes sense for healthcare workers to be protected from severe illness, their exposition on the job demands it. But the messaging was all politics and PR and ended up doing far more harm than good.
Lies catch up. That's why public health crises are better handled telling the whole...
From many comments I have seen from real medical professionals, there is a view out there that being infected but not feeling symptoms is not being infected even if you transmit the virus to someone else, because they seem to think that it's impossible to transmit a virus in those circumstances...
Today I saw an article talking about a "new symptom" that was discovered by scientists: exercise intolerance. Probably this study.
Good freaking grief. Patients have been pointing this out from pretty much day 1 and even with all of this they miss out on what actually matters: it's not...
Damn, that would be so useful to study. To know what changes and how quickly. So much information we could have if only it were done right.
Do other symptoms improve? Very likely there are several types and factors involved.
It's also weird how after sleeping, essentially being horizontal for...
It's mostly that it's the step of last resort. Especially in the US, private insurance is the first step, then there are (usually state) programs for temporary disability and only later SSDI with nothing in-between, federal disability often happens many years into it.
It's similar here in...
Obviously self-management is not advocated by patients, it's all there is because the medical profession has gone AWOL from this, it represents the complete absence of professional medical care. This is like saying that not thinking about eating is advocated by people in a state of famine...
Uh huh.
Same old wine in the same old bottle. Just the same old mindless nonsense.
Actually Long Covid should have forever ended that debate. It's a massive embarrassment what is happening right now.
What treatment of ME? It's not treating ME that costs $9K per year, it's not even treated at all in most cases. And the economic loss per person is far greater than $9K on average, it not only has to account for loss of income (at a median of something like $40K/y in the US) in addition to other...
Why were the 97.8% hospitalized if they didn't have symptoms?
How is poor sleep or low energy a mental health problem in hospitalized patients? Back pain is mental health? How is worry considered a mental health problem in hospitalized patients? I would argue that not worrying one bit while...
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