Scales which measure disease severity

Simone

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I’m after some information about scales which measure severity of disease in ME/CFS, in terms of functional impairment (mild vs severe). There seem to be several which measure symptom severity and, whilst there will likely be a correlation between symptom and disease severity, they’re not the same.

I’m aware of Bell’s CFS Disability Scale, but I’m not sure how much (if any?) work has been done on validating it?

Any tips would be most appreciated!
 
I found no scale that takes care of all angles. I’m also often in-between categories.

So for myself and others, when I educate about the illness, I have simplified it. I explain that mildly affected people are the ones who can work, even if all they do besides work is sleep, moderately affected people cannot work and are mostly housebound, severely affected people cannot work and are mostly bedbound and very severely affected people are bedbound and cannot eat by themselves, walk nor talk and they live in darkness.
 
There's a study by Jason which uses patient samples from Newcastle and Norway and online patients, where approximately a quarter (23, 8%) was housebound. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5464362/

But I don't think that's where the IOM report got the 25% figure from. I suspect it's a figure that goes way back (there's a patient group called the 25% ME group that seems to existed for more than 15 years). One report must have given a rough estimate (I hope they didn't base it on the 25% estimate of passive patients by Bleijenberg et al.) and it probably got repeated from then on.
 
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