Thank you
@Peter Trewhitt
Yes, I am very passionate about the term CFS being disagreeable to me. Having been very mistreated by several who hear that term, has made me abhor it. Early on, very early on I had no idea this term would generate such downright nastiness and disdain from others. Even loved ones. I was innocent to what consequences a CFS diagnosis would have for me, as regards social and medical interactions.
Decades ago I was diagnosed with CFS, later confirmed as ME by a specialist in this field.
I don't know if this is the case for others, but the CFS case definitions exclude a significant number of my symptoms. Early on, recounting these "outlying" symptoms, such as neurogical and cognitive problems, were received with polite puzzlement, but seemingly nothing more.
Others may be more accepting of the term CFS, and I don't aim to change their minds. However, having run the gamut of friends', family, colleagues' and the medical profession's negative reactions to CFS, I would really like to see this dropped.
We also know that "CFS" has impeded research and likely medical education about it. Researchers are discouraged from investigating this field, funding is in short supply, and medical personnel learn little about it in their training. A perpetual circle of disdain and neglect.
I don't mean to cause a great argument here about this term, but I have had far too many negative experiences because of this name to be happy using it to describe my illness. Many people only have time to read the headlines and not delve further. CFS is a headline I would prefer not to have.