I have just emailed the editor at New Scientist to very politely enquire why they have not covered the launch of DecodeME as it wasn't in this week's issue either
https://africaclockwise.wordpress.com/2020/07/22/longhaulersunite/This is a call for all Long COVID-19 and chronic illness sufferers to come together to make our voices heard. A rallying cry for those too weak to march and protest. A covenant for those physically unable to stand up for our rights.
On 9th July, Director of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, Dr Anthony Fauci commented that an emerging pattern of extended COVID-19 symptoms is “highly suggestive” of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis. For months, people with ME and ME activist associations have been publicly expressing concern that health authorities are not prepared for the avalanche of post-viral effects about to come crashing down on the lives of millions of patients across the world (see the Washington Post).
Most estimates so far had been about 1/10 but this here suggest 1/5. However the sample size is small and probably skews higher but still suggests between 10% and 20% may be more accurate.It comes as initial observations from a UNSW Kirby Institute study of the long-term effects of mild-to-moderate COVID-19 indicates that one in five patients experience ongoing symptoms, including breathlessness, fatigue, anxiety and "brain fog".
The institute's Professor Gregory Dore, who recruited patients for the study at a testing clinic at St Vincent's Hospital where he is an infectious diseases physician, said "at least 20 per cent" of a representative sample of 72 randomly selected participants who had not been hospitalised reported symptoms three months after clearing the virus.
"These ongoing, debilitating symptoms don't appear to be correlated with age [and include] many people in their twenties, thirties and forties," Professor Dore said.
This guy paid almost 8000 pounds for tests and a specialists to tell him that there is no damage to his heart, brain or legs, that his symptoms are partly due to deconditioning and to state with confidence that he will make a full recovery.
I don't have the heart to tell him otherwise.
Still, this is important because:The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention acknowledged Friday that a significant number of COVID-19 patients do not recover quickly, and instead experience ongoing symptoms, such as fatigue and cough.
As many as a third of patients who were never sick enough to be hospitalized are not back to their usual health up to three weeks after their diagnosis, the report found.
Hopefully this encourages well-funded efforts to follow up long-term."COVID-19 can result in prolonged illness even among persons with milder outpatient illness, including young adults," the report's authors wrote.
The acknowledgement is welcome news to patients who call themselves "long-haulers" — suffering from debilitating symptoms weeks and even months after their initial infection.
"This report is monumental for all of us who have been struggling with fear of the unknown, lack of recognition and many times, a lack of belief and proper care from medical professionals during our prolonged recovery from COVID-19," Kate Porter, who is on day 129 of her recovery, wrote in an email to NBC News.
I've watched his video yesterday and it made me cringe a little.
Statistically, most post viral fatigue patients recover though (in general, for Corona we don't know yet), so there is reason to be hopeful/optimistic.
I just hope it won't end up being people that have recovered from a self limiting illness attributing their recovery to their own attempts/state of mind/therapies vs the ones that don't.
I have had that happening with peoplpe, including doctors, that had Mono, as I did.
I was hoping to be one of the lucky ones to leave the post Mono club but got a long term membership instead.
'ME – also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis, chronic fatigue syndrome or ME/CFS – is defined by as a “long-term (chronic), fluctuating, neurological condition that causes symptoms affecting many body systems, more commonly the nervous and immune systems”.'"Covid And Chronic Fatigue: We Must Learn From ME Patients’ Suffering" (July 24)
https://eachother.org.uk/covid-and-chronic-fatigue-we-must-learn-from-me-patients-suffering
This is something of an understatement:
"Negative stereotypes about the illness still pervade mainstream media and the medical establishment, often leaving patients embarrassed."
Yes, in Swedish there's a similar connection between the terms, but not as literal. It's called "nervsystemet" ("the nerve system") in Swedish, so at least we don't have the word "nervous" ("nervös" as in anxious) in the abbreviation.Maybe it would be better to use the term "neurological"? I wonder whether other languages have this problem?
No ME, CFS or PVFS criteria that I’m aware ask people to separate out symptoms they had at the start from the others. And I don’t recall anyone saying not to mention the symptoms one had at the start.https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2020/07/1...longcovid-are-missing-from-the-nhs-narrative/There is an enormous amount that we still do not know about covid-19. Many symptoms do not appear to be “post viral” as they emerged with the first manifestations of covid, some symptoms appear later, and it is still uncertain if the relapses represent viraemias or not
I’m not sure that’s a good definition of post viral.