This has always been an issue with reporting on "long Covid." If you're measuring anyone with any symptom at 3 months or even six months, the numbers will be enormous. Early on, when everyone in ME-world predicted this, I assumed most had in mind a magnitude on the order of 5% or a bit more, on...
Did this ever get satisfactorily responded to?
And what would be the reason why, by the time of publication, Sir Simon wouldn't have wanted to have been an author?
from one perspective, it's a clever maneuver to try to resuscitate the Oxford criteria in this back-handed way. but it also feels like a desperation move or what is referred to as a "hail Mary pass" in our national concussion-causing celebrations called football. Could bringing back a...
This has always perplexed me. The FND epilepsy experts routinely argue that many patients have both. And they also argue that many with parkinson's have overlapping FND and Parkinson's as separate diagnoses. I was just told the same about functional cognitive disorder--that people can have both...
it seems reasonable to think that some might people have psychiatric issues that can lead to whatever weird physical manifestations--panic attacks would be an example. But the problem is extrapolating that in reverse direction and insisting that because it CAN in some cases lead to weird...
They now actually claim they have "positive" signs to identify this. Unfortunately, the studies seem generally to identify people as having it based on signs, and then they test to see if they are more likely to have these signs than those without the disorder. It's circular reasoning.
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