This reminds me of when my autistic son was taken to A&E with what turned out to be a broken bone. Initially a doctor refused to send him for an x-ray on the grounds that "he's obviously fine" - because he was sitting quietly on a chair. If he had actually been fine he would have been running...
1. Covid infection was the trigger. Not connected to anything in my previous physical or mental health that I can think of - but I do have a closeish relative who had ME for many years (and then recovered) so perhaps there is a genetic predisposition.
2. Like everyone else says really: Pacing...
I hope someone can ask her what she actually means by "goal setting" and "treatment planning". Professional jargon is a slippery thing.
(Neither my GP nor the ME service nor the Long Covid clinic have tried to get me to "set goals", so I'll look forward to hearing that they've all been struck...
The MEA's website says "ME/CFS has no effective drug treatment and full recovery is rare, but symptoms can stabilise and improve over time with careful management and specialist support." So what treatments are they talking about here?
No, this was also when I was healthy. Another example: for years I was frequently late to pick up my children from school, even though that was a fixed time point every day, week after week for years - because I had no sense of when 3.30 was approaching unless I constantly checked the clock, and...
I'm interested to know what the evidence basis is for this being 'everyone's universal experience', because it isn't mine at all. To use your examples, I sometimes sense the need for lunch at 11.30 am and sometimes at 4 pm, and there's no way I'd be able to bring an interview to a close after...
I agree it looks like it has promising aspects.
But the featured "Activity Energy Diary" and "Structured Thought Diary: a guided CBT-style tool for patients to record symptom triggers and responses" don't suggest that their advice on learning to pace will be particularly good. Or that they have...
Would this theory imply that (what we currently call) ME/CFS and post-viral fatigue/illness are the same thing, just that in some people it resolves fairly quickly and in others it doesn't?
In my cynical moments I think it isn't an accident that these trials are being done with a confused definition of Long Covid that lumps together different conditions so that no meaningful results come out of it. Because meaningful results would be quite inconvenient. I don't mean that's what...
They [the Department of Health I mean] don't think it's real in adults either. They keep trotting out the line that the REGAIN trial proves LC goes away with exercise and 'behavioural support'.
Ref 7 is: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39337079/
A Pilot Study on the Effects of Exercise Training on Cardiorespiratory Performance, Quality of Life, and Immunologic Variables in Long COVID
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