Just to note that unlike X/Twitter you don't have to have an account to read Bluesky posts. This could of course change in the future, but I think it's unlikely as it was a "cost-saving" measure brought in by Musk during his initial mismanagement.glad you’ve put a copy here so we who aren’t on blue sky can read fir ourselves
She's friends with Wessely/Gerada. I think the only way some of that clique can hold on to their beliefs about ME/CFS is by demonising pwME. Some of their NHS colleagues now have LC, and I think Gerada even set up a support group for them, so it must be a hard disconnect to hold on to.I still can't get my head round the total disconnect between her hostility to ME patients and her support for the CBT-GET model for ME and her 'soundness' on LC.
She's friends with Wessely/Gerada. I think the only way some of that clique can hold on to their beliefs about ME/CFS is by demonising pwME. Some of their NHS colleagues now have LC, and I think Gerada even set up a support group for them, so it must be a hard disconnect to hold on to.
She really hasn't produced or said anything useful about LC. It just shows the despair in the patient community for any recognition that isn't dismissive that people would celebrate someone who really hasn't done anything. Her papers on LC were mediocre and while she is still hostile to the obvious fact that ME/CFS is the biggest issue in LC, the LC community has long moved past this. Eventually she will trip and reveal her true beliefs.Given her previous hostility to (and mass-blocking of) pwME, I was surprised at this reply to the thread, where she said she was "turned down for a grant to explore the parallels between persistent LC and ME".
A lot of handwaving about clots and "exhausted T-helper cells" and rehab: perhaps the kind of scientific understanding that is to be expected from a "professor of primary care health sciences". She is a high-profile figure but from a scientific perspective her article does not add anything new and really just contributes to the confusion.
And I suspect it’s some kind of pathetic ‘etiquette’ everyone is forced to observe and doesn’t either mind or see the utter harmfulness of it because they are allowed to get on with the bit that matters to themShe's friends with Wessely/Gerada. I think the only way some of that clique can hold on to their beliefs about ME/CFS is by demonising pwME. Some of their NHS colleagues now have LC, and I think Gerada even set up a support group for them, so it must be a hard disconnect to hold on to.
Since the earliest stages of the pandemic, muscle weakness has been a key symptom described by patients post-COVID infection. Estimated to affect up to 60% of those with long COVID, it can have a profound effect on the ability to carry out activities of daily living.1 Many patients describe a fluctuating pattern to such symptoms, which can be triggered by exercise or fatigue.2 Most of these patients do not receive any muscle-specific investigations and many are told that they are experiencing the impacts of deconditioning or that they have a psychological or functional disorder. Such patients are often prescribed antidepressants or diverted down rehabilitation or psychological support pathways. Although some patients find this helpful, many patients experiencing muscle symptoms do not benefit from such approaches. Two case studies are given in Box 1.
Box 1.
Case studies
As more is learned about the impact of COVID on the neuromuscular system, recent research has highlighted a variety of ways that COVID damages muscle and nerve cells,3 resulting in muscle weakness. This changing knowledge needs to lead to changing practice.
I can't see it as I've blocked her. Can you copy the post here, please?New post on Bluesky by her on the BJGP paper.
https://bsky.app/profile/trishgreenhalgh.bsky.social/post/3lc3chlb67s2u
I can't see it as I've blocked her. Can you copy the post here, please?
Trish G on Bluesky said:Our new paper, led by @oohgpwales.bsky.social:
Muscle weakness post-COVID: a practical guide for primary care
TL;DR: patients with muscle weakness after COVID-19 infection may have myelopathy, nerve damage or other organic pathology. Not always due to 'deconditioning'!
https://bjgp.org/content/74/749/573
I'll do so in future.I can't see it as I've blocked her. Can you copy the post here, please?