Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
With over 100 retweets already, Elisa Perego's thread is getting a lot of coverage on Twitter.
I could easily imagine this angle ending up influencing discussions in the long Covid community more generally including in their private discussion forums. Some of us remember how they wanted to distance themselves from us last year e.g. in comments to the APPG in the UK.
When I see her say she explicitly says she is happy for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis being used in media coverage about long Covid, I might trust her a bit more. Though as I say, her reasoning wouldn't seem to add up given what she said about why she dislikes the term "chronic fatigue syndrome":
This makes it look that really it's the construct (whether it's called ME, ME/CFS, or CFS), which she has a problem with.
The study in question used the Fukuda CFS criteria so it seems reasonable that "chronic fatigue syndrome" would be used .
Edited to add: Some more tweets suggesting it isn't simply "chronic fatigue syndrome" she has a problem with:
Anyway I previously got frustrated with her and her reasoning in the past and decided I could probably use my energy in better way than spending too much time on her comments.
I could easily imagine this angle ending up influencing discussions in the long Covid community more generally including in their private discussion forums. Some of us remember how they wanted to distance themselves from us last year e.g. in comments to the APPG in the UK.
When I see her say she explicitly says she is happy for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis being used in media coverage about long Covid, I might trust her a bit more. Though as I say, her reasoning wouldn't seem to add up given what she said about why she dislikes the term "chronic fatigue syndrome":
"People are dying in #LongCovid. They are also having thrombotic events, cardiac events, strokes, and more. I am worried to seeing articles speaking of a "chronic fatigue syndrome" in the press."
"I am talking about #LongCovid being presented as a chronic fatigue syndrome in the press when it's clear it's a multi system disease with severe cardiovascular impact."
This makes it look that really it's the construct (whether it's called ME, ME/CFS, or CFS), which she has a problem with.
The study in question used the Fukuda CFS criteria so it seems reasonable that "chronic fatigue syndrome" would be used .
Edited to add: Some more tweets suggesting it isn't simply "chronic fatigue syndrome" she has a problem with:
Anyway I previously got frustrated with her and her reasoning in the past and decided I could probably use my energy in better way than spending too much time on her comments.
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