Dear Editor
I would urge readers not to take at face value this highly biased article.
Instead, I suggest you read the Expert Testimony to the Guideline Committee of Professor Jonathan Edwards.
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/GID-NG10091/documents/supporting-documentation-3
Far from being influenced by a few disgruntled patients, it is clear that there is no valid clinical trial evidence supporting Graded Exercise Therapy or Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for ME/CFS. Millions of pounds have been spent on trials to try to prove effectiveness, but even using subjective outcome measures on open label trials (which would not be accepted as valid evidence in any drug trial), only small transient differences between treatment groups and control groups were found. These were no better than placebo effects, the differences vanished by long term follow up, and they were not supported by objective measures such as increasing fitness or return to work.
There is extensive evidence that some ME/CFS patients health is significantly worsened long term by trying to increase activity as recommended in these therapies.
https://meassociation.org.uk/2019/0...urvey-on-cbt-and-get-in-me-cfs-03-april-2019/
If some doctors and therapists who practice these therapies cannot accept that they have been getting it wrong for decades, and likely harming some of their patients, they no longer deserve to be referred to as experts in ME/CFS.