Post of October 2019 NIH ME/CFS webinar audio moved to this thread:
News from NIH: ME/CFS Webinar - October 17, 2019
News from NIH: ME/CFS Webinar - October 17, 2019
In case you don't know, information on past meetings, including speakers, transcripts and audio recordings can be found here:I see that these happen on a cycle. Have any of us been on these? What are they in practice? A general current and future research call with venting Qs? Who is the intended audience, specific or a salad of audiences?
Sorry for the Q onslaught...
Thank you. Honestly, I know that I won't make it through those based on my current mission: capacity ratio. Thank you again though.In case you don't know, information on past meetings, including speakers, transcripts and audio recordings can be found here:
https://www.cdc.gov/me-cfs/programs/meetings.html
It is such an unfortunate way to communicate with desperate patients who face tremendous unmet health care needs and as mentioned by someone in the call, such a low number of experts. Those who witnessed the early days of the outbreaks are in retirement age.There is actually no way to tell whether you were deliberately shut out of a call or if they just didn’t get to your call. I’m pretty sure that all of us have been left out at one time or another. The issue of denouncing GET & CBT were brought up by at least 2 other callers and received a poor response. None of the questions were answered adequately.
There is actually no way to tell whether you were deliberately shut out of a call or if they just didn’t get to your call. I’m pretty sure that all of us have been left out at one time or another. The issue of denouncing GET & CBT were brought up by at least 2 other callers and received a poor response. None of the questions were answered adequately.
The CDC website was also essential in my successful discussions with Kaiser Permanente.Given eminence seems to be important in the medical field, the CDC website and some of its statements have proved useful for us in another country.
Lots of the sympathetic clinicians the CDC uses in its study recommend some form of exercise, so in some ways it's not that surprising.The CDC website was also essential in my successful discussions with Kaiser Permanente.
However, I made no progress when directly asking the CDC to comment on the PACE evidence for GET. They simply would not comment on PACE, period. Head in the sand pretending PACE never happened.
The CDC first tells me everything they do is science based, then they cherry-pick which peer reviewed published science they will and won't acknowledge. Appalling.
Off the record (anonymous inside source), I was told that some in the CDC still believe:
- GET can be beneficial for some patients, and the CDC won't remove this treatment option for doctors who want to use it.
- Not exercising is certain to cause health problems.
- Should the CDC say that GET is not recommended or harmful, some patients might use that as an excuse to not exercise at all. In other words, the CDC doesn't trust patients to properly manage their level of exercise.
That's a ridiculous argument because none of the psych therapies, including GET, require a prescription or even the involvement of a physician in any part of the process. Which is often lost in all the nonsense about how downgrading evidence for it would be bad for some of the patients who may benefit. It could be made illegal, under pain of death, to prescribe and it still wouldn't change availability because it's literally just an exercise program, the same kind any trainer can do when outside of a true rehabilitative program, say where nerve damage has to be taken into account.GET can be beneficial for some patients, and the CDC won't remove this treatment option for doctors who want to use it.
However, I made no progress when directly asking the CDC to comment on the PACE evidence for GET. They simply would not comment on PACE, period. Head in the sand pretending PACE never happened.