There's a rapid response to that BMJ piece from Edoardo Cervoni, Director, Locumdoctor4u Ltd. Southport
Excerpt:
Training healthcare professionals to recognise and manage ME/CFS is undoubtedly important, but it assumes a level of understanding that we do not yet possess. The proposed e-learning modules, whilst well-intentioned, risk disseminating incomplete or outdated knowledge if not grounded in cutting-edge research. Without a deeper understanding of the biological mechanisms driving ME/CFS, training may inadvertently perpetuate ineffective or even harmful practices.
Instead, campaigners should prioritise advocating for increased funding and coordination of biomedical research to unravel the aetiology of ME/CFS, and findings to translate findings into diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Specialised research centres, staffed by experts in immunology, neurology, and metabolomics, are critical to this effort. These centres could foster interdisciplinary collaboration and accelerate discoveries, much like the approach taken in cancer research decades ago, which transformed outcomes through targeted investigation.
He should join S4ME (unless he already has, under a pseudonym!)