Week beginning 5th August 2019
Severe ME Week and Severe ME Day 8th August
On a day to raise awareness of severe ME, organisations and individuals around the world have published articles and patients' stories. Below are some examples. More are listed and linked on the thread.
Thread
here
MEAction "Today, we honor and remember those with severe M.E."
The article contains some of the stories the patient community has submitted about what it's like to live with severe ME.
Article
here
Emerge Australia gives information about its severe ME day campaign.
Article
here
#MillionsMissing Germany published a new video in honor of Severe ME Day. It features (among others) a person with severe ME, Dr Bupesh Prusty from Würzburg university and the #MillionsMissing protest in Munich.
Thread with link
here
USA Open Medicine Foundation ''A message from Whitney on Severe ME Day'' Whitney Dafoe, who has very severe ME, has communicated a short message of support to other severe ME sufferers.
Article
here
UK ME Association ''Press release: Severe ME Day - M.E. sufferers hit out at "humiliating" DWP benefit assessments''.
Expresses concern over the very difficult process to obtain benefits and how this can make patients deteriorate even further. Presents four severe ME patients and their struggle with the system.
Press release
here
The ME Show Gary Burgess has made a special podcast episode for Severe ME Week. It includes an interview with severe ME patient and blogger Jo Moss (A Journey Through the Fog) and with the ME Association Welfare Rights Adviser Ann Innes, who offers insight and some advice on the process of obtaining benefits.
Podcast episode
here
ME Association guest blogs:
"Severe ME Day: A Call to Act with Truth and Integrity"
Greg Crowhurst looks back on a 26 year long fight for patients with severe ME and concludes: "despite all our best efforts, despite all the deaths, nothing has happened in my view to demonstrably change the situation for the better".
Guest blog
here
"Severe ME Day: Life in a Nursing Home, Light Sensitivity and Very Severe M.E."
Under the pseudonym Eira Stuart, a severe ME patient tells about the added trauma health care personel without knowledge about severe ME can bring to an already very vulnerable situation.
Guest blog
here
''My daughter and the pervasive dangers of PACE in paediatric M.E.'' by Adam Johnson.
A chillingly distressing account of the mistreatment of a girl with severe M.E. and her family by health and social services in the UK.
Article
here Thread
here
"There's no point in me having a Netflix subscription or an Audible account"
Anna Wood gives a good personal description of cognitive symptoms that come with ME and the big limitations they bring.
Article
here Thread
here
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Articles, blogs, videos...
Massachusetts ME / CFS & FM Association reports that Frontiers Spotlight Award candidates include the 'Advances in ME/CFS Research and Clinical Care' research topic. The winning team of topic editors receives US $100,000 to organize an international scientific conference on the theme of their successful research topic. Reader interest (clicks, downloads and shares) influence the decision.
Thread with details
here
SCOPE The disability equality charity in England and Wales, SCOPE, has provided a Q&A about ME with Dr. Charles Shepherd, medical advisor of the ME Association.
Article
here Thread
here
The Guardian’s Science Weekly podcast and the Cochrane review
On 08/08/2019 the Guardian’s Science Weekly podcast published an update of their episode titled: “What role should the public play in science?” The podcast was aired on November 2018 and gave the impression that Cochrane was giving in to pressure from activists to withdraw its review on exercise therapy for ME/CFS. The recent update seems to admit that this narrative was incorrect as details of the complaint to Cochrane “have been made public and they show that it was based in science.” Michiel Tack wrote a blog post summarizing these recent events.
Podcast
here Thread
here, Blog
here
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Biomedical Research
Nature - Scientific Reports
''Assessing cellular energy dysfunction in CFS/ME using a commercially available laboratory test'' by Newton, Morton, et al.
The mitochondrial energy score (MES) protocol, developed by the Myhill group, is marketed as a diagnostic test for CFS/ME. This study attempted to replicate the test and found no difference from healthy controls. They also tested it on healthy samples stored for 24 hours and found variable results that might account for the apparent results in Dr Myhill's original study. Conclusion: The test doesn't work.
Paper
here Thread
here
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Biomedical review and hypothesis articles
Diagnostics
''ME/CFS: A comprehensive review'' by Rivera, Lidbury et al.
This long article takes a detailed look at what is known about the pathophysiology of ME and suggests a 'three pillars' hypothesis - neurological, immunological and endocrine. They also discuss the lack of effective treatments, lack of a biomarker, and the need for more research.
Article
here Thread
here
Diagnostics
''Pathological Mechanisms underlying ME/CFS'' by Missailidis et al.
This article outlines the symptoms across multiple body systems and findings of disturbances in multiple biomedical pathways and shifts in metabolism. The authors suggest these point to an underlying molecular pathology reflecting a far-reaching homeostatic shift. A variety of triggers may initiate body-wide pathological cascades with similar outcomes, and stratification may help diagnostic tests to be found.
Article
here Thread
here
Frontiers in Immunology
Review article: ''Fatigue, Sleep, and Autoimmune and Related Disorders'' by Zielinski, Systrom and Rose.
Long article, includes CFS in list of conditions that cause profound fatigue.
From the abstract: ''This review describes how inflammation and the central nervous system contribute to fatigue and suggests potential mechanisms involved in fatigue that are likely exhibited in autoimmune and related diseases.''
Article
here Thread
here
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Psychosocial research and review
Social Science and Medicine
''Relationship satisfaction, communication self-efficacy, and CFS-related fatigue'' by Milrad et al.
Questionnaire based research concludes: ''Results highlight the importance of considering depression and communication-related factors when examining the effects of relationship satisfaction on CFS symptoms such as fatigue.''
Paper
here Thread
here
Journal of Adolescence
''Depressive symptoms at age 9–13 and chronic disabling fatigue at age 16: A longitudinal study'' by Collin, Crawley et al.
Questionnaire study of data from a population longitudinal study did not find an association between depression in young adolescents and later chronic disabling fatigue measured by the Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire once the confounding effect of ongoing depression was removed.
Article
here Thread
here
Journal of Child Health Care
''Management of CFS/ME in a pediatric population: A scoping review'' by Collard et al.
A literature review found 29 papers including nutritional, exercise and psychosocial factors in treating children with CFS/ME. Repeats without caveat conclusions from poor quality studies that exercise and multifaceted treatments including CBT, LP etc. are helpful. Not a recommendation.
Article
here Thread
here
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Conferences
USA - Stanford Symposium 3rd Annual Community Symposium on the Molecular Basis of ME/CFS at Stanford University, sponsored by OMF, 7th Sept 2019.
It will be live-streamed free.
Details including signing up
here Thread
here
UK - Invest in ME International ME conference week, 27 - 30 May 2020.
You can sign up to their newsletter.
IiME information
here Thread
here
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Action
UK ME Association ''Website Survey: Illness Severity and Definitions''.
Dr Shepherd is interested in feedback on the NICE guidelines current 3 categories of severity, and suggests 4 categories would be better, adding very severe. Comments invited on MEA social media. The monthly survey asks your current severity.
Article
here Survey
here Thread
here
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