Evelien and I compared funding and planned clinical trials for ME/CFS to other illnesses with a similar prevalence and disability such as multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia. The results were quite interesting so we decided to write a follop-up blog about it.
https://mecfsskeptic.wordpress.com/...ding-comparison-is-me-cfs-getting-too-little/
Here's the Twitter summary:
2) The total number of interventional trials for ME/CFS since 2000, the start of the Clinicaltrials.gov database, is substantially lower than the number of trials registered for a comparable illness in a single year.
3) It is sometimes claimed that ME/CFS is receiving so little research funding because it’s mischaracterized as a psychiatric, not a biomedical illness. The results for schizophrenia cast doubt on that hypothesis.
4) In 2019 Schizophrenia, a case example of a psychiatric illness, had 17 times the amount of NIH funding and 17 times more clinical trials registered than ME/CFS. Being a psychiatric disease doesn’t necessarily hamper research funding.
5) You might think that schizophrenia gets more behavioral intervention studies and that multiple sclerosis has more drug and other intervention studies. The data doesn’t show this (the trend was even in the opposite direction).
6) For all three illnesses, behavioral interventions were extremely popular and comprised a third or more of all registered trials. For multiple sclerosis, there were trials on video gaming, art, Pilates, ballet etc.
7) In conclusion: based on NIH funding and registered trials on Clinicaltrials.gov, things do seem to be moving much faster for other diseases. For us, this was a cause for optimism as it means that things can move much quicker for ME/CFS as well.