@Russell Fleming @Action for M.E.article in The Northern Echo:
"
New hope for sufferers of ME
RECENTLY a 21-year-old woman became only the second person in the UK to have a diagnosis of ME recorded as the cause of death. Family describe Merryn Crofts from Rochdale, who died in May 2017, as a “live wire” until she contracted the illness at 15, going from a bubbly young girl to a wheelchair in six months, and confined to her home within a year."
"
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) are approved treatments and have been found to be very effective.
Both of these should be offered by professionals with a specific understanding of ME. Incorporating rest periods into the day also allows people to pace themselves and lessen the overwhelming fatigue.
This is different from sleeping during the day, which ideally should not be encouraged as it worsens night time insomnia.
Researchers in America have identified that people with ME may not metabolise nutrients as effectively as those without ME, and this may be a cause of or contribute to their symptoms.
A recently developed blood test was shown to be 84 per cent accurate when 50 patients with ME were compared with control individuals without the disease.
Many people report a degree of relief once they have a diagnosis, as it allows them to better understand their symptoms."
http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/16401152.new-hope-for-sufferers-of-myalgic-encephalomyelitis/
Didn't deserve its own thread, very odd article in that I can't see where the 'New Hope' is and it seems to be mostly a 'comment' taken from elsewhere (?)
another case of bad journalism.
Indicates how much has to be achieved in educating GPs and medics as written by a GP.
Perhaps a letter to the Northern Echo from an ME charity ( or both) to set the record straight is warranted?