Wyva
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
https://www.gavi.org/vaccineswork/what-happens-when-you-dont-recover-epstein-barr-virus
The author says she had ME/CFS after EBV.
(About the author:
Priya Joi is a British-Indian science writer based in Barcelona. She was previously a staff writer and editor at the World Health Organization, The Lancet, and New Scientist magazine. She has a degree in genetics.)
Some excerpts:
And you can of course also read about Paul Garner and his recovery too...
The author says she had ME/CFS after EBV.
(About the author:
Priya Joi is a British-Indian science writer based in Barcelona. She was previously a staff writer and editor at the World Health Organization, The Lancet, and New Scientist magazine. She has a degree in genetics.)
Some excerpts:
Suggesting that psychological interventions could help people with CFS/ME recover is not to suggest there wasn’t also a biological cause.
(...)
However, it has been suggested that there is a psychological connection with symptoms in some people with CFS/ME. Doctors like Simon Wessely, professor at the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London, UK, who have spoken about this, have been vilified and even sent death threats as some vocal patient-support organisations and doctors deny any psychological link.
(...)
Peter White published another paper with Michael Sharpe, psychiatrist and well-known CFS expert at the University of Oxford, showing increasing evidence that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) can resolve symptoms in some people too.
This is not to say that everyone with CFS/ME will see their symptoms ease with the same methods, but that there is evidence that for some people, psychological interventions work.
(...)
However, it has been suggested that there is a psychological connection with symptoms in some people with CFS/ME. Doctors like Simon Wessely, professor at the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London, UK, who have spoken about this, have been vilified and even sent death threats as some vocal patient-support organisations and doctors deny any psychological link.
(...)
Peter White published another paper with Michael Sharpe, psychiatrist and well-known CFS expert at the University of Oxford, showing increasing evidence that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) can resolve symptoms in some people too.
This is not to say that everyone with CFS/ME will see their symptoms ease with the same methods, but that there is evidence that for some people, psychological interventions work.
And you can of course also read about Paul Garner and his recovery too...