No personal stories, please!

I'm looking for research findings on what percentage of people diagnosed with ME/CFS probably don't actually have it.
Do we know?
I don't think we can easily know much. I do think we need to start with laying out the issues so if we find any studies we are at least contextualising them appropriately.
At this year in time the first question we need to confirm is whether we are finally confirming that the illness is 'confirmed' by 'do you have the following symptoms for x amount of time' rather than the 'rule out' confusion we had for years, which effectively made it fatigue for long enough time --> go to doctor, check it isn't iron or .. did they check anything else really? --> label as 'chronic fatigue syndrome'
Technically if we had any change to decent medicine then what we
would/should be getting is those who maybe get diagnosed with something (perhaps rare) that turns out to when addressed also mean that the me/cfs 'disappears'. But we don't even know that happens because 1. comorbidities are not just likely but probably more likely than not (something makes
both more likely), 2. having something else that is unaddressed could well have been a contributor to the me/cfs but sorting out that other thing doesn't then make it go away, 3. the record-keeping has been apalling.
On the other end of things we have the criteria should be focusing around eg PEM being a cardinal symptom, but also appropriately interpreted - but we eg in the UK have had fatigue and PPS clinics where we don't know what is going on and their funding seems to relate to 'each person with cfs' even though they claim as their treatments are inappropriate for me/cfs that they don't treat it, just 'cfs' or 'cfs/me'.
Which = the garbage in, garbage out weakness because the UK have been taking me/cfs funding and using it for 'anything but me/cfs' to be funded because those who don't have the illness with say and do the right things.
Having said that I suspect most of those who are diagnosed do have me/cfs, it is just the bps would love to pretend there is some huge demand of people with their imagined fiction of cfs/me from the 2000s so they can keep doing this and cutting out and harming those with me/cfs by putting them through collateral damage clinics that harm me/cfs people to 'fish out' those who don't have it and scrap-heaping us all
My point is that in any studies there will be a lot to look at very carefully because even if it is well done and insightful I don't think we can say anything is easily extrapolated.