Should we change our name: 'ME/CFS Skeptic'?

Should we change our name: 'ME/CFS Skeptic'?

  • Change the name

    Votes: 47 67.1%
  • Keep the name

    Votes: 23 32.9%

  • Total voters
    70
We prefer a short and neutral name… the one we were thinking of is: 'ME/CFS Science'.

…won't give a wrong impression, for example that we know better (names such as ME/CFS watch, ME/CFS Investigator, etc. might give some people that impression

I Understand why you think that, and I had the same thought when trying to come up with suggestions for you. But I encourage you to reconsider.

What you do is unique, of exceptional quality and I think you can confidently claim to be doing something different (without worrying too much about any implication that it is also better).

Your analysis does so much to help the whole field move forward. @Ravn and @SNT Gatchaman have explained this well in previous posts. Your blogs are better than many review papers, because of the way you Forensically examine individual papers, including their data. This helps influence advocates who otherwise might be happy to run with attractive – sounding findings. And I can’t help feeling it’s influencing researchers as well.

So please do consider something less neutral, though I completely understand why you need to change the name, because you are clearly missing out on readership.

maybe something like:
ME/CFS Science Sleuth
(Adapting an earlier suggestion).
"ME/CFS Expert Reviews"
Also good, but I can see why you might not want to use the word expert.
ME/CFS Skrutiniser
This too, or maybe :
ME/CFS Science Scrutiniser

Anyway, good luck finding a name
 
Last edited:
Just want to say I'm not a fan of 'sleuth' because it carries connotations of amateurism. In fiction, a sleuth is an amateur detective, while the police are the professionals. (Of course, in fiction, the amateurs are better than the professionals, but I think you're better off not associating yourselves with amateurship!)
 
'The ME/CFS Science Boffins'? 'Boffins' might give non-native English-speakers a bit of a challenge, though.

Not sure I like this one but chucking it out there in case it inspires anybody to come up with something better...
 
It's the /CFS bit that makes it hard. I'm not suggesting it should be dropped from the condition name, of course, just that it makes titles clumsy.

I can't help thinking of names in the DecodeME format – CritiqueME, AnalyseME, ExamineME – but they don't work nearly as well with /CFS added.
 
Back
Top Bottom