Yet ME/CFS has been disgracefully neglected by science and medicine.
This is simply bullshit. The lack of a discovery of a mechanism, or of effective ways to manage it, is not for want of trying.
And do you remember what happened to the leading researcher from London who tried to study it? He won't go near it now, and who could blame him.
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DrY213
emmmgeee
19 minutes ago
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I've heard similar stories of researchers being harassed by M.E. activists, it's similar to what happened during the AIDS crisis and though it's obviously completely counterproductive, probably just reflects desperate patients frustrated at the lack of control over their lives and the way their illness is viewed.
Comments section mostly positive but..
Would anyone with an Guardian account like to put them right?
Comments section mostly positive but..
Would anyone with an Guardian account like to put them right?
Yes, it is sometimes a lack of care, but other times inappropriate treatments masquerading as care, which can be closer to borderline abuse.Is lack of care really an adequate explanation for the fact that historically no country has seriously attempted to help us patients?
In my opinion attributing negative psychological traits to a large group of people (the people in the governments around the world) doesn't work as explanation.
Is lack of care really an adequate explanation for the fact that historically no country has seriously attempted to help us patients?
I would say so. Surely if no government has attempted to help patients they must not care. By definition if they cared they would have done something.
What BPS people have always said (usually between the lines) that ME/CFS is a made up illness by people who are very confused and in need of psychotherapy and an exercise therapist. If one accepts this as true, then there is no need to invest anything into biomedical research.
I would say that "lack of care"
The general point that I am trying to make is that if you work in health care for long enough you get the clear message that the public and government by and large do not really care whether or not they have put in place adequate medical systems. As of this week that has become something of a stark reality, unless you live in Australia or New Zealand. There are huge complaints if the broadband is a bit slow here and there but almost nothing about there not being the resources to eat with basic medical needs.
But how do we know what the public care about? The public don't have a mouthpiece, and the reporting of our views in the media is not unbiased.
The public have mouthpieces - they are called members of parliament, whom they elect and whom they can lobby locally.
My neighbourhood constantly lobbies our MP about dustbins and about burglaries and about planning permissions and having mosques built in Golders Green and about car parking and about airports and noise but nobody ever says anything about the fact that our hospitals have no beds to deal with basic surgery etc.
The current situation is instructive. There was a specific point where Keir Starmer suddenly realised that the policy on Covid was disastrously wrong. Up to that point he had been happy to believe the government advisors. None of the political parties in the UK has been adequately informed about the healthcare situation.
And I know that the public do not really care because I chat to people regularly and they are completely unaware that health care funding is grossly inadequate.
The public have mouthpieces - they are called members of parliament, whom they elect and whom they can lobby locally. My neighbourhood constantly lobbies our MP about dustbins and about burglaries and about planning permissions and having mosques built in Golders Green and about car parking and about airports and noise but nobody ever says anything about the fact that our hospitals have no beds to deal with basic surgery etc.
The current situation is instructive. There was a specific point where Keir Starmer suddenly realised that the policy on Covid was disastrously wrong. Up to that point he had been happy to believe the government advisors. None of the political parties in the UK has been adequately informed about the healthcare situation.
It is completely crazy that someone should have to wait two months for an appointment to be assessed for a possible diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis.
And I know that the public do not really care because I chat to people regularly and they are completely unaware that health care funding is grossly inadequate. A professor of anatomy friend of mine who used to work for me was recently shocked to hear that Norway spends nearly three times as much per head on healthcare as the UK. He thought the UK had the best system in the world still. He thought I was going to say how much more we spent. People simply have no idea - presumably because they cannot be bothered to inform themselves.
The current situation in medical research is so gummed up with politics and bureaucracy that almost nothing useful gets done. Productivity has taken a nosedive. I just think it is naive to say 'science' and 'medicine' have ignored needs of people. The scientists and medics are struggling just to get basic treatment to people and to find money to pay their admin overheads. Almost every time I chat to a fellow scientist online now they sound as if they are pretty much ready to give up because nothing works and they are under so much pressure just to do day to day things.