JellyBabyKid
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Is it done on a weekly basis possibly would be covered in next edition?
Good point, but would have expected it to be om their website as that is updated more often
Is it done on a weekly basis possibly would be covered in next edition?
that is really weird. But they have this article which is currently #2 on their website:
https://www.newscientist.com/articl...ing-coronavirus-symptoms-can-last-for-months/
“Why strange and debilitating coronavirus symptoms can last for months
From extreme fatigue to weight loss, numbness, breathing difficulties and chest pain, some people’s covid-19 symptoms are proving very hard to shake“
However from what I can see, they’re not linking it to ME or even other types of post viral fatigue, rather it’s written as if it’s only specific to coronavirus.
I can’t access the whole article, if anyone can I’d like to know what it says afterwards. But it would be very odd if they didn’t mention ME at all in the whole article.
GreatThe NIH study is doing in depth study of only 40 people with ME, so it's vital they actually have ME. This study of 20,000 can, I think cope with some misdiagnoses.
I don't have time to read all 13 pages, but given that the research is genetics-based, would it also be useful to have samples from "healthy" family members for comparison?
Website FAQ said:Would it be useful to include relatives who have ME to see whether they have the same mutations associated with disease
We welcome participation by all people with ME, whether or not others in their family are affected. Our project is not to identify such large-effect, family-specific DNA variants, but smaller-effect, general-population DNA variants.
It would also be good to have samples from those lucky few who have recovered
Website FAQ said:Can people who have improved or recovered participate
Those who pass the Canadian Consensus or Institute of Medicine criteria can participate. Following these criteria to the letter (as we will do) unfortunately means that those who are fully recovered will not be able to participate. This is an unfortunate but inevitable consequence of the need for us to fully comply with these criteria.
GreatI’m not an expert in hypothesis testing/statistics, but this means it has sufficient statistical power?
Website FAQ said:Will the target number of cases be big enough to generate meaningful findings, and to detect any subgroups?
Until the first GWAS study for an illness is done, it is just not possible to know how meaningful its findings will be. However, we’ve chosen to study 20,000 people with ME/CFS because other projects of this size commonly found around five causal links between DNA and disease diagnosis. ME/CFS could have many independent genetic causes and a study of this size will have a chance of revealing part of this potential spectrum of genetic causes.
That is a bit of a scary thought but general practitioners do not know the difference between criteria, or the nuances, and most of them would not know what post exertional malaise means. And in Canada, most physicians do not even know the Canadian Consensus Criteria. Most patients have had to educate their physicians, and that is a horrifying thought for all the physicians out there.The reason may be that most patients were not given the diagnosis based on CCC and IOM critera but on Fukuda and/or NICE. Therefore you would have to do a retrospective diagnosis with the CCC and IOM which has the usual problems with recall.
I'll leave that to the researchers to answer that one.The protocol may well the best choice but I don't actually understand this statement:
Those who pass the Canadian Consensus or Institute of Medicine criteria can participate. Following these criteria to the letter (as we will do) unfortunately means that those who are fully recovered will not be able to participate. This is an unfortunate but inevitable consequence of the need for us to fully comply with these criteria.
It does not answer the question of why there is a 'need' to fully comply with criteria applied non-retrospectively. Science does not have 'needs' like that in general. You choose criteria that best help you ask a question. You have reasons. There may be a good reason for choosing to fully comply but so far we have not been told what it is!! Personally I think that if recruitment did fall short on currently applied criteria it would be more powerful to recruit UK subjects with a past history than to go toothed populations.
The reason may be that most patients were not given the diagnosis based on CCC and IOM critera but on Fukuda or NICE.
I don't think *any* patients in the UK will have been diagnosed by the CCC or IOM criteria. I think the NHS only uses the NICE criteria. I'm assuming that for DecodeME, you have to have had a diagnosis and then that we'll have to fill in some sort of CCC/IOM checklist to see if we're eligible for the study.
Don't seem to. I think they missed a bit of a trick here, because it is the expected norm these days, out of politeness if nothing else, to send a confirmatory email when someone registers or signs up for something. A slight omission in public relations I think. But I also appreciate this is likely a learning experience on their side, but would be good to correct in due course. The registration process needs to come across as highly professional, because indirectly people calibrate their thoughts of the whole operation on details such as this.I’ve registered, do you get a confirmation email? Just wondering.
Don't seem to. I think they missed a bit of a trick here, because it is the expected norm these days to, out of politeness if nothing else, to send a confirmatory email when someone registers or signs up for something. A slight omission in public relations I think. But I also appreciate this is likely a learning experience on their side, but would be good to correct in due course. The registration process needs to come across as highly professional, because indirectly people calibrate their thoughts of the whole operation on details such as this.