In fairness, in many situations it is going to be practically difficult to do much accommodation to these needs. For example, in most health systems there is just isn't the funds available to do home visits, and having worked in the hospital system many lifetimes ago it is hard to see how...
Wiborg, et al. 2010.
They are indeed arguing backwards. Their claim is that because subjective self-report fatigue was not correlated to objective actigraph measurements, therefore it must be the objective measure that is wrong or irrelevant, not the subjective measure.
But if anything that...
There are some jobs for which a diagnosis of ME or LC should make that person ineligible for the job.
Hate saying that, but these conditions (and no doubt others) potentially compromise competence too much, particularly in situations where critical decisions have to made on the spot, without...
I remain agnostic about it being one thing, variations on one thing, or a bunch of different things.
None of those possibilities would surprise me.
Still insufficient data to draw reliable conclusions.
It would not surprise me if there turned out to be some sub-types of ME. There are for many diseases. It might even be the normal situation.
But each disease group still has something in common. Cancers, for example, are a failure to restrain cell growth.
None of which excuses simplistic...
Indeed. I have long been of the view that when we get a good handle on the problem, it is quite likely to turn out to be common and undiagnosed/misdiagnosed, particularly in its more mild forms where PEM may not be such a distinct feature.
It isn't like a substantial prodromal phase is an unknown thing. Cancers, for example, don't spring up overnight, fully formed and making their presence felt.
Once people finish coming to Fraser’s clinic they often don’t respond to follow-up queries, so it is hard to know exactly how fully they have recovered
Or even if they partially 'recovered' in the first place, in any meaningful sense.
Mostly by shifting responsibility to the patient, and the blame when it inevitably goes wrong.
It is just an excuse generating mechanism for the inevitable limits to doctors' knowledge, coupled with their cowardice in refusing to stand up against the endless cost cutting to the health service.
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