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  1. Sid

    Prevalence and predictors of long COVID among non-hospitalised adolescents and young adults: a prospective controlled cohort study, 2022, Wyller et al

    He also makes multiple false and defamatory claims against patients including that their critiques are non-scientific and akin to climate change denial (at the very end of the interview). He also strongly endorses GET, CBT and cognitive remediation (a treatment for depression btw) in this...
  2. Sid

    Activity monitoring and patient-reported outcome measures in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patients, 2022, Rekeland et al

    If machine learning people were interested in a project like this, it should be easy enough to collect large datasets with little cost. Millions of people out there already have a Fitbit or Apple Watch.
  3. Sid

    Prevalence and predictors of long COVID among non-hospitalised adolescents and young adults: a prospective controlled cohort study, 2022, Wyller et al

    In milder cases, maybe. But what he doesn't see is the devastation in the days/weeks after such excursions outside of the energy envelope.
  4. Sid

    Closed UK: DecodeME updates, was recruitment thread.

    Are efforts being made to enrol people who don’t live on the internet? Were any people with a background in epidemiology or statistics involved in designing this project?
  5. Sid

    Activity monitoring and patient-reported outcome measures in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patients, 2022, Rekeland et al

    That's a lot of steps, especially for severe patients. When I was severe I was doing less than 500 steps per day. Not surprised to see this. I've long suspected that Fitbit is inaccurate and tracks arm movements. Good study, useful results.
  6. Sid

    Prevalence and predictors of long COVID among non-hospitalised adolescents and young adults: a prospective controlled cohort study, 2022, Wyller et al

    I keep thinking I must be misinterpreting it because there's no way in hell something so absurd would pass peer review. But then again, as we've seen before, anything goes when it comes to publishing research that makes ME/CFS patients look stupid or insane.
  7. Sid

    Long Covid in the media and social media 2022

    Executive dysfunction is also one of my most worrisome symptoms. It makes it very difficult to get a job, even one that permits working from home. Struggling to maintain a 4-digit code in your working memory, or a phone number you just looked up, these sorts of things are really troubling.
  8. Sid

    "Scientists hail autoimmune breakthrough" - the Guardian

    Have you had a chance to check out Fig 3? The patient with elevated anti-Ro antibody, it barely declined with treatment, and they still had quite elevated levels of fatigue after 3 months. Bad news for Sjogren’s?
  9. Sid

    "Scientists hail autoimmune breakthrough" - the Guardian

    Having waded through the whole paper now, I don’t see any wrong ideas in it such as T cell driven autoimmunity. Regarding citations or lack thereof, that’s always driven by politics.
  10. Sid

    "Scientists hail autoimmune breakthrough" - the Guardian

    Elsewhere they talk about how the patients also lost other autoantibodies. I think that’s what they’re referring to, not T cells.
  11. Sid

    "Scientists hail autoimmune breakthrough" - the Guardian

    The paper offers an explanation for why rituximab doesn’t work for SLE
  12. Sid

    Closed UK: DecodeME updates, was recruitment thread.

    Congratulations to the team on this huge milestone.
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