News from Scandinavia

And here's the thing I'm curious about; he also tells the story of his email being hacked once. An email from his account went to several receivers at his contact list saying: "You're fired, whore". He never found out who did this.

I wonder if some Danish members might know more about this? Why did he mention this in the interview? If he doesn't know how did it, how was that a relevant story in this context?

That seemed odd to me too. How and why would a patient 'activist' hack into his e-mail to send those messages?
 
The Swedish newspaper Expressen had yesterday an article about 27 year old Sofia who suffers from Ehler-Danlos syndrome and ME, but wasn't correctly diagnosed until she moved to Stockholm.

She talks about a life with a lot of pain and wrong treatments until she finally met a doctor who gave her a thorough assessment.

- Just coming into the clinic was such a relief. There was no one laughing, wincing or trying to push me down. They lamented and said I was not alone. It's such an amazing feeling to be believed and listened to.

Expressen: Sofia fick sin EDS-diagnos efter 27 år
google translation: Sofie received a EDS diagnosis after 27 years
 
Prof. Ola D. Saugstad has been a guest in a podcast about parenting.

The result is a good and informative podcast episode on ME. He talked about what ME is, its symptoms and about PEM.
He went briefly thought the history, different definitions of ME and how that can lead to different research results.
He emphasised the importance of rest and activity adaptation and that health care workers, family and friends must understand and respect the patient's limits.

The result is a podcast episode of 39 minutes providing a really good introduction to ME.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/6OEOiLDC5A8r8eyg8SMaLs?si=lRfoTWNXQ1imqRbfbCDhwQ
 
Is there a way of accessing this other than Spotify, which I'm not signed up to? And what language is the podcast in?
According to the Podcast's website it's also available in iTunes, CastBox and Acast besides Spotify. But I think for now the episode has only been released on Spotify. It's in Norwegian only, I'm afraid..
 
Good opinion piece in a medical newspaper by Sigmund Olafsen, PhD - adviser for master degrees in acoustics and public health.

Lack of data is probably an important reason for lack of objectivity in the ME debate. Another challenge is that studies of cognitive techniques have used, in part, very "creative" techniques in the statistical analysis, where published results do not match what patients and relatives experience.

Utfordringene i ME-debatten
google translate: The challenges in the ME debate
 
From the quote in @Kalliope 's post above

Lack of data is probably an important reason for lack of objectivity in the ME debate. Another challenge is that studies of cognitive techniques have used, in part, very "creative" techniques in the statistical analysis, where published results do not match what patients and relatives experience.

Very creative techniques are the least of it, we know from PACE that they deliberately sought to avoid collecting meaningful data on harms. Then, because there was no data on harms, encouraged the assumption the treatments are safe and cannot harm. A practice that continues in many UK CFS clinics today & I daresay clinics in other countries follow the same path.

Hard to see it as anything other than fraud really.
 
Good opinion piece in a medical newspaper by Sigmund Olafsen, PhD - adviser for master degrees in acoustics and public health.

Lack of data is probably an important reason for lack of objectivity in the ME debate. Another challenge is that studies of cognitive techniques have used, in part, very "creative" techniques in the statistical analysis, where published results do not match what patients and relatives experience.

Utfordringene i ME-debatten
google translate: The challenges in the ME debate
It is claimed by some teams that there is a war on myalgic encephalomyelopathy (ME). But patients do not fight; they are too sick. Serious scientists are not fighting; they see the patients and are so committed to improving their health that they do not have time to appear in the media in time and out.
Brutal. And fair. We do not fight. We are being brutalized. We do none of the fighting, only the suffering. This is a war on US. Waged by people whose aims are harmful to us.
 
The Norwegian ME Association has a guest blog from father to a son who suffers from ME. He tells how he regrets following prof Wyller's advice on trying Lightning Process as treatment. The father is a therapist himself with additional education in cognitive theory and thought LP was the same as cognitive therapy. He joined his son on the LP course and describes it as a frightening experience.

We have made many mistakes as parents - because we want to help. Sending him on LP course is one of the biggest mistakes that has given me a lot of bad conscience and guilt. Unfortunately I feel that exposing my child to LP is a kind of abuse.

Min erfaring med LP
google translation: My experience with LP
 
Nina E. Steinkopf has taken a further look into rulings in the National Insurance Court in Norway regarding benefits for patients with ME.
It's heart breaking to read these rulings. about how ill the patients are and about everything they've tried, yet the court believes more treatment, as CBT, must be tried even though the patients has full support from their doctors that they're not able to work.

Avslag i Trygderetten på feil grunnlag
google translation: Refusal in Social Security on the wrong ground
 
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https://melivet.com/2020/06/17/avslag-i-trygderetten-pa-feil-grunnlag-1/

@Hilda Bastian if you can please also read this article on how patients are told they must undergo CBT/GET to obtain a disability pension. The argument is that that these can reverse disability and/or restore ability to work and neither of these claims are supported by credible evidence.

There's also another problem, not limited to Scandinavia, where patients may be forced to drop out of CBT/GET treatment because it makes them worse. It then becomes easy for disability assessors to refuse them disability pension on the grounds that the treatment was proven to be safe (eg. in the PACE trial) and the patient made no serious effort to get better. Since CBT/GET was created by people with links to the private health insurance industry, one wonders whether that was intended to be so.
 
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https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https://melivet.com/2020/06/17/avslag-i-trygderetten-pa-feil-grunnlag-1/

@Hilda Bastian if you can please also read this article on how patients are told they must undergo CBT/GET to obtain a disability pension. The argument is that that these can reverse disability and/or restore ability to work and neither of these claims are supported by credible evidence.

There's also another problem, not limited to Scandinavia, where patients may be forced to drop out of CBT/GET treatment because it makes them worse. It then becomes easy for disability assessors to refuse them disability pension on the grounds that the treatment was proven to be safe (eg. in the PACE trial) and the patient made no serious effort to get better. Since CBT/GET was created by people with links to the private health insurance industry, one wonders whether that was intended to be so.
Thanks - will read it.
 
Has anyone heard about this "CBT for CFS" study at NTNU? https://app.cristin.no/projects/show.jsf?id=2063494

English translation of the pop sciency summary:
The aim of the project was to investigate whether cognitive behavioral therapy was a good treatment for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome / myalgic encephalopathy (CFS / ME). Persons with suspected fatigue problems from the primary care service (ICPC: A04) received an interdisciplinary clinical examination and assessment in hospital by a physician, physiotherapist, psychologist and a recommended blood test status according to a guideline from the Directorate of Health, and then assessed and diagnosed according to the Fukuda and Canada criteria (10). .3). After the study, CFS / ME patients with> 50% disability (for work and studies) were offered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in a randomized, consecutive, controlled treatment study, ie a 3-arm comparative study, one intervention arm was a short The CBT intervention with 8 individual weekly sessions, the other a standard CBT with 16 weekly sessions, while the control group waited for 16 weeks before receiving a short CBT (see project description). Our hypothesis was that both short and long CBT would have a better effect on CFS fatigue and functional impairment than the control group, and that there would be minimal side effects. In summary: Individuals included were generalized fatigue patients (A04) diagnosed with CFS / ME. Intervention: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Data collected: From NOSF-MISS form, see appendix: Socio-demographic status, fatigue (Chalder), SF-36, HADS, subjective change (CGI), condition (Borg), other form: MCQ-30, SHC, IIP-64. Clinical data: Neuropsychology and indirect VO2max (Åstrand test). Biological material was used only for diagnostics, not as research data. Objectives and benefits: Provide effective and cost-effective treatment of CFS / ME without side effects in mild and moderate condition. According to preliminary data, it may appear that the project's objectives have succeeded with the objectives. The benefit is probably good, as data indicate that short CBT intervention is as effective as standard CBT without side effects.

I found this one: "Is cognitive behavior therapy a good treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome?" that might be the same project. It says they've published a paper on neuropsychological dysfunction in CFS/ME patients and that the results for the CBT study has been sent in but not published yet (2019). It seems the outcomes are SF-36 scores and CFQ, there's also a mention of following the Chalder/King's college approach and mention of a professor in psychology from Kings College.
 
I haven't watched this and I wouldn't understand it anyway! But thought you scandies might like......


You couldn't make it up.

Google translation of the captions for the non-scandies:

00:00 - 00: 05So we ask them to sign. Right here. Thanks, you won't get it back.

00:05 - 00: 07This is going to be so good! Think positive. You "do" ME.

00:07 - 00:10 "How much does this cost?" Why do you ask?

00:11 - 00:16 "No, I do not have much savings because of the situation ..". Sell your car?

00:17 - 00:21 "Yes if I get well then it's well worth it."

00:21 - 00:24 "She sold"

00:29 - 00:31 "She sold!"

00:31 - 00: 34 On the "course" we are in a circle and trampling on sheets

00:38 - 00: 40 That's all!

00:41 - 00: 47 I remember one in the group who was very critical, and raised my hand all the time to be skeptical ...

00:47 - 00: 50The participant asked "why does it help to ignore the symptoms?". "Is it based on research?"

00:50 - 00: 56I answered "of course", but it's not!

00:58 - 00: 59But Norwegian newspapers

00:59 - 01: 01 They believe in us!

01:04 - 01: 06 We can send them anything!

01:06 - 01: 08And they're advertising the LP!

01:13 - 01: 14 That's true!

01:14 - 01: 16 I've gotten so damn rich with those idiots

01:16 - 01: 20VG and Dagbladet ..

01:21 - 01: 27 I just send them piss and they go right on! "Studies" we have made ourselves!

01:35 - 01: 36We take $ 17,000 for each

01:36 - 01: 39And we have no clue, at all

01:41 - 01: 44 They say "it doesn't work, I'm much worse"

01:44 - 01:47 "Can I get the money back? Are there any rules about this?"

01:47 - 01: 49Have them empty pockets ..

01:50 - 01: 53I say "you haven't tried hard enough"

01:54 - 01:56 "Try again"

01:56 - 01:58 "Only 17 000kr"

01:58 - 02: 02And those who criticize us are called .... "activists"

02:05 - 02: 07 That's true!

02:10 - 02: 11Of Vg

02:11 - 02: 13And Dagbladet!

02:15 - 02: 17 I have a buddy scientist in Norway

02:17 - 02: 20 Who lives by researching this patient group and he laughs all the way to the bank!

02:21 - 02: 28Last now, he got millions to investigate if music can cure ME.We all knew it wouldn't show anything, but Dagbladet ...

02:29 - 02: 30Do they just read the abstract?

02:30 - 02: 32 They believe everything he says!

02:36 - 02: 39The "cured" took fewer steps

02:40 - 02: 42And the control group ...

02:50 - 02: 55 But it's so dangerous it worked for PACE

02:56 - 02: 58 Was there no real effect there either?

02:58 - 03: 04No you could have poorer functioning at the start of the study than at the end of the study..On questionnaires

03:04 - 03: 09 And still be considered cured ..

03:09 - 03: 11 But the magazines don't understand anything

03:16 - 03: 20 Want a new job?

03:23 - 03: 26You can make a millionaire on this!

03:31 - 03: 36And now we're going to "research" the LP too, it's golden times!
 
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