TV, Sweden: Vetenskapens värld Corona: vaccinen är här - och de långtidssjuka (58 minutes)
https://www.svtplay.se/video/289014...3-corona-vaccinen-ar-har-och-de-langtidssjuka
Thanks for sharing,
@mango I am watching it now.
ME is mentioned, but in a confusing context. It starts at 34.18 minutes into the documentary.
The documentary says some symptoms of long Covid resembles of ME and then takes us to the new private clinic "Red Clinic" outside Stockholm. They are treating ME patients and are also offering an experimental treatment for Covid patients.
They also do research, but it turns out that they hadn't applied for ethical approval of their research project on Covid, so it has been shut down.
The founder of the clinic, dr. Jonas Axelsson is also working as an immunologist at Karolinska University Hospital. He says some of the ME patients he is treating get better, some even return to work after having been bed bound, so for him this is a calling.
His treatments are symptom relieving drugs and antiviral drugs. He believes that those who get sick have inherited a weakness in the immune system which is a weakness that allows for a chronic virus infection in for instance nerve cells. It could be one of several herpes viruses, which are common, but in these patients it seems the immune system is not able to suppress it. When people then get infected with the corona virus, the immune system runs out of control. The hypothesis is a chronic virus infection because the patients are not able to clear the virus..
His research project was to look for remaining virus activity in 350 Covid-19 patients. When asked about the lacking application for ethical approval, he stops and leaves the interview.
According to the documentary dr. Axelsson had previously stated in interviews that he's collected samples from Covid patients for research.
The day after the interview for the documentary the clinic's website says the study has been cancelled.
Then dr. Axelsson says to the journalist that he will report himself to the police.
Some days later he writes in a letter that he never started the research project and has committed no crime.
Then the documentary cuts to another immunologist at Karolinska University Hospital, Petter Brodin (whom I believe has been involved in ME research? The name rings a bell..) who finds all of this concerning and says he doesn't believe in dr. Axelsson's hypothesis.
