James Morris-Lent
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
These people really are at the minimum of the Uncanny Valley function.
Hi Sarah. I don't have any evidence for that statement it was just a feeling.Why do you think that's unlikely?
They referred to her as a "veteran GP", I think that just means she's been a GP for a long time.I'm not sure which thread to put this in, but here is an article on Clare Gerada's description of how she 'beat' the coronavirus. Somehow, despite having no underlying health conditions, she is being referred to as a 'veteran' of the illness...
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/11186999/coronavirus-paracetamol-chicken-soup-lemonade-survivor/
I think the article goes a long way to explaining the lack of empathy that's been shown to ME/CFS sufferers, especially in the online training provided to GPs (as discussed on previous threads).
I'm not sure quite how to take it - it struck me as an unusual way to describe a doctor. It certainly makes her out to be more than an average GP, especially as the sentence was using the battle term 'beat' to describe her experience with the coronavirus, as if she is some kind of hero with a special fighting spirit that should inspire us all.They referred to her as a "veteran GP", I think that just means she's been a GP for a long time.
I grew up sharing a bedroom with 2 sisters, not unusual for working class families even today - so how can most individuals in families self isolate? She is so far from understanding most peoples' reality, it's very scary.
It was interesting to hear Koroshetz and Breen acknowledge yesterday on the NIH teleconference call that a portion of those who get COVID19 will end up with ME.
Yes, 6 of us and one small bathroom and only the single toilet in an 'open plan' 70's new build house. For a lot of the 70's, 80's and 90's most 3 bedroom houses in the UK were built this way, older council houses used to have an additional downstairs toilet (as mine does). They've started building new builds this way again, sometimes even with 2 bathrooms, but that is still very middle class.Absolutely. Me too, murder as we didn't get on! Plus the whole family shared one bathroom, that kinda makes it tricky too.
Some people have no idea just how privileged they are.
It's a quote for the record books.Was that recorded, per chance? I'd like to hear that bit.
After a long term followup 4 years later:Shit shit shit. Do we have data on what percentage of SARS survivors developed this ME-like syndrome?
Arch Intern Med. 2009 Dec 14;169(22):2142-7. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2009.384.
Mental morbidities and chronic fatigue in severe acute respiratory syndrome survivors: long-term follow-up.
Lam MH1, Wing YK, Yu MW, Leung CM, Ma RC, Kong AP, So WY, Fong SY, Lam SP.
Author information
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Short-term follow-up studies of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) survivors suggested that their physical conditions continuously improved in the first year but that their mental health did not. We investigated long-term psychiatric morbidities and chronic fatigue among SARS survivors.
METHODS:
All SARS survivors from the hospitals of a local region in Hong Kong were assessed by a constellation of psychometric questionnaires and a semistructured clinical interview for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Fourth Edition) to determine the presence of psychiatric disorders and chronic fatigue problems.
RESULTS:
Of 369 SARS survivors, 233 (63.1%) participated in the study (mean period of time after SARS, 41.3 months). Over 40% of the respondents had active psychiatric illnesses, 40.3% reported a chronic fatigue problem, and 27.1% met the modified 1994 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome. Logistic regression analysis suggested that being a health care worker at the time of SARS infection (odds ratio [OR], 3.24; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.12- 9.39; P = .03), being unemployed at follow-up (OR, 4.71; 95% CI, 1.50-14.78; P = .008), having a perception of social stigmatization (OR, 3.03; 95% CI, 1.20-7.60; P = .02), and having applied to the SARS survivors' fund (OR, 2.92; 95% CI, 1.18-7.22; P = .02) were associated with an increased risk of psychiatric morbidities at follow-up, whereas application to the SARS survivors' fund (OR, 2.64; 95% CI, 1.07-6.51; P = .04) was associated with increased risk of chronic fatigue problems.
CONCLUSIONS:
Psychiatric morbidities and chronic fatigue persisted and continued to be clinically significant among the survivors at the 4-year follow-up. Optimization of the treatment of mental health morbidities by a multidisciplinary approach with a view for long-term rehabilitation, especially targeting psychiatric and fatigue problems and functional and occupational rehabilitation, would be needed.
https://rootedinrights.org/listen-u...were-talking-about-when-it-comes-to-covid-19/Finally, there’s the long term. Many people with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, for example, started with viruses such as Epstein-Barr and Ross River Virus. There are also post-Ebola syndromes. This means that even after the pandemic passes, we could have a new crisis on our hands. Why aren’t journalists speaking to people who had this happen to learn more about the threat it poses? There’s plenty of discussion on Twitter among those in the chronic illness community about this and many other issues. They’re not hard to find.
The bottom line is that the hospital system in this country is riddled with problems and issues that people like me know all too well. Seen from the inside, it’s a fragile system that will be tested in the coming weeks, months, and even years.
The public needs to learn what we’re up against. Changes must be made before it’s too late. The chronically ill could play an important role in making this happen, for our own sakes and those of millions of others. We need to be part of that conversation, not treated as a side issue to be ignored.
I’ve just read Phil Hammond’s M.D. column in Private Eye (free to read):Well Dr Phil Hammond on Broadcasting House (BBC Radio4) this morning seemed to think it was a possibility, although his solution was not to be scared, because fear activates the immune system (mind-body connection, you know), which will just make it worse and make it more likely that you will get CFS.![]()
I would be very interested to see the evidence he is referring to.Dr Hammond said:M.D. works in the world of post-viral fatigue and so is expecting an increase in workload further down the line. Evidence suggests that if you’re fearful and anxious when and after you contract a virus, it makes the symptoms and long-term sequelae worse. And the UK is currently bingeing on fear.
Dr Hammond said:Laughter is the best medicine – unless of course you have syphilis, in which case it’s penicillin. There are no effective drugs yet for Covid-19 and the best ways to boost your immune system are not the nonsense new age supplements doing the rounds (there’s a $200 magic yoghurt pill you can shove up your arse) but laughter and sex. The second drug my GP surgery ran out of (after paracetamol) was Viagra.
I would be very interested to see the evidence he is referring to.
Dr Hammond said:
M.D. works in the world of post-viral fatigue and so is expecting an increase in workload further down the line. Evidence suggests that if you’re fearful and anxious when and after you contract a virus, it makes the symptoms and long-term sequelae worse. And the UK is currently bingeing on fear.
Great. Another self-fulfilling prophecy. So if there is an increase in ME-like cases after the epidemic, they can simply blame it all on the *fear* of the epidemic and not the virus itself. :sigh:
The fact that he mentions the thing about fear being relevant in the inevitable surge of post-viral cases makes it clear his opinion on the topic is useless and best ignored. Unfortunately on this topic, it comes with dogmatic confidence and, here, a highly visible platform. Not exactly ideal when the self-proclaimed "experts" on a topic are pulling their advice straight out of their portable sewer system.Dr Hammond is rightly critical of nonsense new age supplements. Do we know if he promotes The Lightning Process at his CFS clinic? I wonder if he’s read Phil Parker’s advice on Covid-19 in The Sun. Maybe if you believe that pretend pills will protect you from covid-19 then that will make you less anxious, which would then reduce your risk of developing ME/CFS (or is it just post-viral fatigue?)
Dr Hammond is rightly critical of nonsense new age supplements. Do we know if he promotes The Lightning Process at his CFS clinic? I wonder if he’s read Phil Parker’s advice on Covid-19 in The Sun. Maybe if you believe that pretend pills will protect you from covid-19 then that will make you less anxious, which would then reduce your risk of developing ME/CFS (or is it just post-viral fatigue?)