Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
They still missed most of the cases, they still do today, we know delayed diagnoses are common and usually only confirmed by MRI.
Sorry but I don't think this is the case. The great majority of cases of MS can be diagnosed clinically. The difficulty is that in clinical terms the key feature that distinguishes the disease is recurrent attacks with remissions. So it is difficult to diagnose MS rather than some other organic brain lesion on the first attack. I am pretty sure that MRI has made only a marginal difference to the estimated prevalence of the disease.
Making some wrong diagnoses is not in any sense pretty much the same as it being standard teaching that a condition is psychosomatic. To be honest, if I was a doctor wanting to make up my mind about the origin of ME, having advocacy groups raising red herrings like things would very strongly push me towards thinking it was all make believe. PWME need to be very aware of that.