Pray what are these "specialist clinics were genuinely excellent" dispensing and has it been validated [and not by GRADE]?
Or is it just the fine Doctors who lead them?
People are debating with Rachel Pope on Twitter. I'm inclined to ignore her here and let the Twittersphere sort her out! She's not a medical doctor, and is just expressing a personal opinion.
Yeah, same, just saw what you probably mean and yikes (and if not the same then double yikes). Ignore and/or block. Some people are just naturally unpleasant.Upgraded to a block. Her attitude to someone who tried to discuss the matter with her was appalling.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3O7_2u9Ng6k
While more men have died of Covid-19 at time of writing, Frances Williams, a professor of genomic epidemiology at King's College London, says that preliminary data from the Covid Symptom Tracker app — which she helped develop — shows women are slightly more likely to suffer long-term effects following a Covid infection.
By way of contrast, in post-viral fatigue, women outnumber men two to one. In chronic fatigue syndrome (or myalgic encephalomyelitis), they make up 85 percent of patients.
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opini...re-often-women-maybe-it-ll-change-ncna1259686Early data coming from online Covid support groups certainly seems to mirror this — although this could change with time. This cohort appears to consist of patients who are relatively young and previously healthy, which is also the case with people who acquire CFS/ME.
As I have documented in "Pain and Prejudice: How the Medical System Ignores Women — and What We Can Do About It," CFS/ME is one of 10 overlapping chronic pain conditions that predominantly affect women; all suffer from stigmatization, lack of research and poor treatment offerings.
Watch a part of the interview with Björn Bragée here:
https://www.tv4.se/artikel/71qQqKd4...tidscovid-samma-som-me-bjoern-bragee-reder-ut
Google Translate said:Is long-term covid the same as ME? - Björn Bragée clarifies
"Same symptoms - medically it is similar"
The other day, a column was spread by journalist Agnes Arpi in which she writes about the similarities between ME and long-term covid and she describes Sweden as newly awakened and muddle-headed in this matter. Patients are diagnosed with "anxiety" in their medical records and are forced to return to work even though they feel very bad and have lots of strange symptoms.
Is there something in Agnes Arpi's worries? Is long-term covid the same as ME? Björn Bragée, pain doctor at Bragée clinics and expert at ME, tells what the research says.
ETA: Agnes Arpi is also interviewed in the long covid video.
Overall a good article, but apparently the author didn't read Paul Garner's most recent BMJ blog post..nbcnews.com
Opinion | Women are more likely to be Covid long-haulers. Here's why that matters.
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opini...re-often-women-maybe-it-ll-change-ncna1259686
But what on earth is she saying?
Thanks for the translation into english @strategistShe appears to believe that ME sufferers believe in a postviral disease, while in her eyes long covid is viral and not postviral.
Also, the reason there has been lumping in ME is not for the lack of trying to split, but due to an inability to do so in a meaningful way.
The good news is that Long Covid sufferers are getting attention — there are some 70 Long Covid clinics around the U.K., and, according to NBC News, more than 80 post-Covid clinics in the U.S. This is a feat if you consider how relatively new Covid is. It took more than 80 years to determine a diagnosis for what’s known as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or ME/CFS. Today it affects an estimated 2.5 million Americans and shares symptoms with Long Covid.
The costs of ignoring illness are high. ME/CFS sufferers have greater health care needs, are more likely to be unemployed, often require care from family members and are more likely to attempt suicide. Research into ME/CFS remains paltry, but sufferers are hoping that the interest in Covid’s after-effects will help shed new light on their own plight. Maybe they will get answers too. The U.S. National Institutes of Health has just announced funding worth $1.15 billion for investigations into Long Covid, which it has named Post-Acute Sequelae of Sars-CoV-2 or PASC.
https://youtu.be/XK5Jz4Yqr8A
.@trishgreenhalgh says, "Show me someone with Long Flu..." err...
Dr David Strain @the BMA: To say Covid is like flu is absolutely ridiculous. As Trish said, you don’t get long flu.
I'm a member of a long covid support group here in Hungary and now that the covid situation is getting much worse than ever here (record high number of infections, much younger people with much worse symptoms than before with the new strains, etc), so now in the current situation I see desperate people, family members of young people with rapidly deteriorating condition, ask people with long covid to donate blood plasma, so more of it would be available for treating covid.
I remember someone with LC in my own group who was completely bedbound first but then improved a lot. I saw some people who said walking is way too much for them. I don't know how common this is, it may not be. But when I came down with post-viral fatigue after glandular fever, I spent a lot of time on a gf forum and I remember reading everything but never commenting, because I didn't have the cognitive energy. People more severely affected may be less communicative and seemingly less present, who knows. Time will tell. But in general, this seems to be rare in the group.Do you have cases with severely affected LC people comparable with very severe ME? (completely bedbound, extreme sensitivity to light, sound, touch etc.)?
These patients reported more fatigue in the Chalder Fatigue Score (p=0.006), more stress intolerance (p=0.042) and more frequent and longer post exertional malaise (PEM) (p=0.003), and hypersensitivity to noise (p=0.029), light (p=0.0143) and temperature (p=0.024) compared to patients not meeting ME/CFS criteria.