rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Not sure if twitter going down the drain, people giving up or end-of-year normal, but twitter chatter has pretty much fallen down to pre-COVID level. Ghost town in terms of advocacy for chronic illness, like LC never even happened. Meanwhile the LC subreddit is busier than ever, but it's at the same stage as in 2020: everyone confused, no help from healthcare, everyone wondering what the hell is even happening, etc.
We're really seeing the same dynamic that played out. After a while, people just give up, especially seeing complete apathy from friends and family. It's easy to see how it happened with us, the default is set to fail.
And the NIH program seems resolute at failing so they can gloat about how they "tried" and it's simply impossible. Hard to point out how it would be any different. Like a war won without firing a single shot because no one came to defend.
Basically only a handful are still vocal. Maybe it's worth a shot.
And, yeah, somewhere down there is a slide where CBT is featured as a possible treatment and apparently the NIH has never figured out how to do clinical trials for less than $60M, or whatever. There's a quote from Koroshetz, not sure if it's in that thread, where he says this way of working with patients is unprecedented and new to them. Even though they're mostly ignoring the patients and AIDS set the model for how effective this approach is. Seems like they learned nothing at all from AIDS, other than if you crush a patient movement effectively, you can ignore it forever.
We're really seeing the same dynamic that played out. After a while, people just give up, especially seeing complete apathy from friends and family. It's easy to see how it happened with us, the default is set to fail.
And the NIH program seems resolute at failing so they can gloat about how they "tried" and it's simply impossible. Hard to point out how it would be any different. Like a war won without firing a single shot because no one came to defend.
Basically only a handful are still vocal. Maybe it's worth a shot.
In recent weeks @NIH has made it clear the #LongCovid RECOVER initiative has very limited clinical trial funds — & with those funds are prioritizing useless & harmful therapies like CBT & exercise. We need to speak up — here's a letter to email NIH
And, yeah, somewhere down there is a slide where CBT is featured as a possible treatment and apparently the NIH has never figured out how to do clinical trials for less than $60M, or whatever. There's a quote from Koroshetz, not sure if it's in that thread, where he says this way of working with patients is unprecedented and new to them. Even though they're mostly ignoring the patients and AIDS set the model for how effective this approach is. Seems like they learned nothing at all from AIDS, other than if you crush a patient movement effectively, you can ignore it forever.