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All this sounds eerily familiar. And the medical profession seems to be funnelling people into unproductive psychological counselling etc.

I wonder how long they'll be able to continue to deny the existence of ME/CFS for now that we're apparently facing a new tidal wave of cases.

“We’ve also seen muscle weakness that makes patients fatigued from the smallest effort, and a decline in oxygen diffusion in patients that were moderately ill or worse,” he says, adding that some recovered patients also report problems with their short-term memory.

She was eventually sent for a psychological evaluation and further follow-up. Her appetite hasn’t returned, and she still suffers from fatigue and weakness. The uncertainty is one of the hardest things to deal with.

“The medical people don’t really know what’s going on either,” she says. “When you have the flu, the doctors know what to tell you. Here that’s not the case. The doctors are very nice and it’s not their fault, but as a coronavirus patient you’re learning along with your doctors. It’s a surreal feeling.”

A few days ago, she posted on Twitter the clinic’s referral to her for psychological help. Messages of solidarity and support poured in.

“I still get a rapid pulse,” she says. “My sense of smell isn’t back to normal, and sometimes I feel dizziness even when I’m resting, along with unexplained fatigue.”

Dashat who is training to become a Pilates instructor, says she was in excellent physical condition before she became ill. “Today when I run it’s very hard for me to breathe,” she says. “I’ve also experienced drops in blood pressure. I absolutely don’t feel the same as I was before.”

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news...life-is-still-hell-two-months-later-1.8983733
 


I haven't listened to it so far, but here's a public post from Facebook:

Joan Mcparland
4 hrs ·
axobuTi734a.png


Professor Paul Garner is an Infectious Disease Consultant with post-Covid ‘fatigue.’
He perfectly describes PEM, the despicable way #ME patients have been treated for decades and calls for caution on GET.
I’ve personally waited for this day for 20yrs 8mths, sincere thanks @PaulGarnerWoof
You will never know how many #ME patients around the world will be filled with hope through your awareness & honesty. Our time has come after the decades of the pain of disbelief & dismissal.
 
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https://meassociation.org.uk/2020/0...t-on-graded-exercise-for-post-covid-syndrome/

If you are a GP and dealing with people with this fatigue, please note my personal experience that Pacing is essential, and GET is harmful.”

Professor Paul Garner
Professor-Paul-Garner-13.07.20.png

Professor Paul Garner.
Professor Paul Garner, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, made the following comments to 10,000 UK doctors on Covid-19 forum at the weekend:

“Colleagues, clearly in ‘long haul’ COVID there is a spectrum of symptoms, conditions, damage and need for recovery.

“Personally, I have noted how often the illness symptoms recur if I do too much physical activity or mental activity (I am now on day 114) and how this can be mitigated by careful Pacing, as defined by the CFS/ME literature.

“I also believe many ‘long hauler’ patients don’t realise this relationship of relapse with exertion (although I know it doesn’t apply to all).

“The CURRENT UK NICE Guidelines are 13 years old. They recommend Graded Exercise Therapy; and for Pacing, they say ‘health care professionals should advise people with CFS/ME that, at present, there is insufficient research evidence on the benefits and harms of Pacing,’ (NICE, 2007).

“On Friday afternoon, NICE posted an unsigned PDF saying that, in the context of GET, ‘it should not be assumed that the recommendations apply to people with fatigue following Covid-19’. They make no statement about Pacing.

“I am concerned this confusion risks sending muddled messages to GPs. I respect GPs though are good at making up their own minds about these things!

“If you are a GP and dealing with people with this fatigue, please note my personal experience that Pacing is essential, and GET is harmful.

“And more broadly as a community of doctors, can we somehow push for clearer guidance for us all, with useful materials? With my Covid-19 fog, cutting through the plethora of advice about Pacing on the internet is a bit overwhelming!”
 
I am awaiting the statement from BPS lobby that the term 'long haul covid' is medically inaccurate, as none of these people are any longer than they were previously, few have hauled anything that can be proven in standard medical tests, and that the standard widely used covid tests have not been properly evaluated by questionnaires designed to prove everything is psychological.
 


I haven't listened to it so far, but here's a public post from Facebook:

Joan Mcparland


This was excellent.

Paul Garner talks about post covid for half an hour.
He tells his story, describes a fluctuation of symptoms, brain fog. That doing too much results into "an echo of the original infection".

He goes on to say:

It's actually quite complicated to negotiate this viral fatigue. You have to have some insight into it. Because it isn't like an hour later, it's a day or a day and a half later.
You have to record all your patterns of activity, to try and work out what's going on, and it does bring back old symptoms.

The literature that I'm finding very useful is the chronic fatigue/ME literature, although I'm not in that stage in terms of timelines and so on.

It's much more useful than much of the medical literature about this, all the self help groups about pacing.
It's really, really helpful and the people that have been most useful to me have been people that have ME. Who are very kind, and they help me learn that I will make mistakes with this pacing. They help me be forgiving and they help me understand that you have to just reduce your expectations of how you spend your day.


He believes post covid is a spectrum and that GPs are catching up fast even though post viral issues have been poorly understood in the past. This is not a confrontation, but an opportunity to take seriously some of the symptoms and the problems to people who have chronic fatigue and post viral syndromes.

He also mentions the NICE guidelines about increasing exercise and describes it as completely inappropriate for him.

He talks about being in a privileged position, as he's able to not work at the moment, and that there are many, many people without such privileges.
 
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Frustrating comments about post viral syndrome on Irish national radio
Long Term Effects of Covid-19 Dr.Hadi Manji - Consultant Neurologist
and Senior Lecturer at the National Hospital for Neurology and
Neurosurgery, London; Prof Sean Gaine- Consultant Respiratory
Physician at Mater Hospital; Priscilla Lynch- Medical Journalist and
Clinical Editor, Medical Independent; & Ann-Marie- Listener who is
dealing with long-term effects of Covid

<https://www.rte.ie/radio1/today-wit...nday-13-july-2020/?clipid=103450795#103450795>
---
17:33
Dr.Hadi Manji:
"This is sort of picture we have seen before in post viral syndrome.
It may take a few months ... for the fatigue ... one advises graded
physical exercise programme, and gradual increase in functioning. So
generally, these patients will post virally do gradually improve, but
it may take a few months." [..] "But the majority of patients have
post viral-type symptoms will take a few months and they should all
get better"

So no warnings about the risks from exercise, nor that some people end
up with long-term conditions such as ME and CFS after post viral
syndrome.



 
This was excellent.

Paul Garner talks about post covid for half an hour.
He tells his story, describes a fluctuation of symptoms, brain fog. That doing too much results into "an echo of the original infection".

He goes on to say:

It's actually quite complicated to negotiate this viral fatigue. You have to have some insight into it. Because it isn't like an hour later, it's a day or a day and a half later.
You have to record all your patterns of activity, to try and work out what's going on, and it does bring back old symptoms.

The literature that I'm finding very useful is the chronic fatigue/ME literature, although I'm not in that stage in terms of timelines and so on.

It's much more useful than much of the medical literature about this, all the self help groups about pacing.
It's really, really helpful and the people that have been most useful to me have been people that have ME. Who are very kind, and they help me learn that I will make mistakes with this pacing. They help me be forgiving and they help me understand that you have to just reduce your expectations of how you spend your day.


He believes post covid is a spectrum and that GPs are catching up fast even though post viral issues have been poorly understood in the past. This is not a confrontation, but an opportunity to take seriously some of the symptoms and the problems to people who have chronic fatigue and post viral syndromes.

He also mentions the NICE guidelines about increasing exercise and describes it as completely inappropriate for him.

He talks about being in a privileged position, as he's able to not work at the moment, and that there are many, many people without such privileges.
I hope he does not hurt himself doing those. He's doing a lot of awareness and it must be exhausting. Although I certainly understand the feeling of urgency, of knowing that others will hurt themselves until proper guidance finds its way, with things moving too slowly for those who are sick now and need early advice ASAP.

Especially with stuff like that:


But this is an incredible moment, as if a bad timeline was created some 3 decades ago and the good timeline is reasserting itself. I am so ready for some good in this badly neglected space, for myself but also knowing that others have it so much worse makes it a moral imperative.
 
I am awaiting the statement from BPS lobby that the term 'long haul covid' is medically inaccurate, as none of these people are any longer than they were previously, few have hauled anything that can be proven in standard medical tests, and that the standard widely used covid tests have not been properly evaluated by questionnaires designed to prove everything is psychological.
my bolding :rofl::rofl::rofl: you do make me laugh so much sometimes @Wonko
 
I interviewed Canadian long COVID patient Chandra Pasma - her husband has had ME for 15 years, so she knew what (not) to expect from health care and is leading the long COVID advocacy charge...

https://medicalerrorinterviews.podbean.com
You may be asking yourself: if medicine has known for a long time some people don’t recover from viral infections, why haven’t they been researching it?

Mostly it is because there is a wide spread and embedded medical error in the medical system -- it is so embedded, most physicians are blind to it. Just like fish don’t see water.
Spot on.
 
From a major German news outlet, Spiegel (Translation deepl); it links to an older, pretty well written article on ME, too.

"In addition, researchers assume that in individual cases viral infections can trigger a so-called chronic fatigue syndrome, in which a misdirected immune response can lead to constant exhaustion, persistent pain, lack of concentration and other serious complaints. It is conceivable that this disease can also occur as a complication of a sars-CoV-2 infection."
 
The Swedish news site on medicine "Dagens Medicin" writes today that long-term illness with covid symptoms now will be registered.

Many people who are ill long term with covid-19 symptoms say that they have been denied care and met with disbelief. Now the National Board of Health and Welfare, together with the Swedish Agency for Medical Evaluation (SBU), has been commissioned by the government to map the long-term sick.

....
Thomas Lindén says that there are knowledge gaps when it comes to long-term patients with covid-19 symptoms, who are not so ill that they need hospital care but can still be ill for several months. Already eight to ten weeks ago, the National Board of Health and Welfare looked at the state of knowledge for this group, but then stated that there was not enough knowledge.


Långtidssjuka med covidsymtom kartläggs
google translation: Long-term illness with covid symptoms is mapped
 
From a major German news outlet, Spiegel (Translation deepl); it links to an older, pretty well written article on ME, too.

"In addition, researchers assume that in individual cases viral infections can trigger a so-called chronic fatigue syndrome, in which a misdirected immune response can lead to constant exhaustion, persistent pain, lack of concentration and other serious complaints. It is conceivable that this disease can also occur as a complication of a sars-CoV-2 infection."
Tweet by Karl Lauterbach (famous German politician and prof. of health economics and epidemiology) about this article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Lauterbach
Chronic fatigue syndrome is also a common complication of SARS 2002/3. persisted there often for years. The mechanism of the disease is not yet understood. Also exists after other viral diseases. A disease that has been very neglected in research. (translated by deepl)
 
Just a mention of a Canadian article on a science journalist in BC who has long covid. The piece is written by someone who doesn't seem to understand that there is no good treatment available, believing that:

Herridge said patients should trust their symptoms and seek medical help that can offer "supportive management."

"I think it's very important that their symptoms and complaints are really validated and taken seriously."

She said that patients and their families should seek "mental health support in addition to the physical health support."

There is no real medical management support and there is still issues with being believed. Also, there always has to be mental health support included in a knee jerk fashion whether it's needed or not.

Perhaps someone who is able might want to connect with the journalist (either the one who is sick or the one doing the write up) with some better information.

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent...pe-with-disease-s-long-haul-effects-1.5647886
 
It was reported a few months ago that one of the main anchors at CNN, Chris Cuomo, contracted COVID. He has since covered the long-term symptoms a bit, as he does himself still have brain fog and he says depression without sadness, which probably came from a GP who thought of chronic fatigue but sees it as depression, my guess as the definition of atypical depression is basically chronic fatigue without PEM. He says he can't train as well as he used to, either. If anyone has ever seen him shirtless, the dude definitely lifts.

He had a segment a few weeks ago with a mother whose entire family of 6 was sick and 4 of them still have symptoms, two of them severe enough to be disabling, though more on the mild-moderate end. Tonight he had another segment with her along with CNN's medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta, who was pretty sympathetic and has a good reputation as TV doctors go.

The segment didn't go into details but he mentioned ME, aka the fancy name for CFS. He seems to want to dig into this and is frankly likely to do some reports on it. He said he'd bring both of them back to talk about it in the near future. His show is pretty high profile so reaches a lot of people. So this is nice.

But also significant is that he is the brother of NY's governor. I'm pretty sure this is something they'll talk about. Andrew Cuomo was pretty visible in the early days of the crisis, when NY was at its worst, and held daily briefings and conferences talking about it. If he talks about it would reach a whole lot of people, including in government.

 
There is no real medical management support and there is still issues with being believed. Also, there always has to be mental health support included in a knee jerk fashion whether it's needed or not.

Yep. Nothing against mental health support where it's needed or wanted but where it isn't needed or wanted it can often just place an extra burden on the patient.

They never seem to figure out that time, energy and resources spent this way might be more productively spent elsewhere. Even if that time is spent just resting.
 
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