Sly Saint
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
both the 25% me group and Invest in ME used to have really good archives of all the 'old stuff' but since creating their new websites all of it seems to have gone. I don't know if it would be worth contacting them to find out if they have back-ups?MEA=ME Action (Campaign).
I'm still trying to track down these pamphlets from 1987/1988. Does anyone know where I might be able to get hold of (copies of) them?
I've asked Action for ME whether they have archives going back that far, but I'm not holding my breath!
an "(1988) ME Action Campaign leaflet" does get referenced in various places including SWs 'Old Wine in New bottles', and also I think in Margaret Williams submissions to the Gibson Inquiry(2005?).
and again in SW
Management of chronic (post-viral) fatigue
syndrome
The conventional view
You are ill with a poorly understood disease. Physical and mental
activity should be limited in an effort to prevent further
deterioration in your condition. Work, housework, childcare and
physical exercise need to be avoided or approached with caution.
An upsurge in symptoms should lead to further rest. This
approach may help limit your symptoms until they resolve or
a treatment becomes available. This is the 'conventional' view
(ME Action Campaign factsheet, 1988).
Many sufferers have been told that
'physical and mental exertion is to be avoided' (ME Action Campaign
factsheet, 1988). This may be. correct in some cases, but
there is as yet no way that these cases can be identified. In general
such advice is counter-productive, and must be set against the
following:
- the harmful effect of disuse and inactivity on muscle function,
in addition to respiratory and cardiovascular performance;'4
- the psychological benefits of exercise on emotional
disorders;'5
- the adverse psychological effects of lack of exercise;'6
- the deleterious psychological effects of avoidance of feared
situations, as in agoraphobia;'7
- recent evidence that dynamic muscle function is normal in
patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, muscles being neither
weak nor fatiguable.'8