Use of technology
Impressive to be using an activity monitor as far back as in the 1990s, when there are researchers telling us that even now there is no suitable technology to produce useful objective outcomes. @sarahtyson
That quote may be useful sometime e.g. when commenting on the PACE...
Thanks for posting about Grant Illingworth, SNT.
Dr Richard Webby was just on Radio New Zealand Sunday Morning
The recording isn't up yet, but I will update the post when it is. (Link since updated)
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/covid-19/525469/covid-19-will-be-with-us-forever-flu-expert...
Of course, there's not one single coherent story that is the 'BPS mechanism'. I expect there are some BPS people who have suggested that deconditioning is the cause of symptoms and if you fix the deconditioning, you fix the CFS. I think that idea, much like the idea of causal childhood trauma...
I note that non-return to work could be due to a range of factors, not just personal health status. The health of a family member, changed life priorities/assessment of risk and the ongoing presence of the job could all affect work return rate. Future work could look at the impact of the...
Looks potentially important - the authors have a lot of impressive affiliations e.g. Yale School of Epidemiology.
There is a risk that people who were experiencing persisting symptoms in the first weeks might have been more likely to sign up for inclusion in the study - there was that lag...
To be devil's advocate for a moment: Perhaps the BPS view does not require deconditioning to a level that is worse than healthy sedentary people? Perhaps it just requires a relative loss of fitness?
So, for example, an elite athlete becomes sick and rests, abandoning training for a few weeks...
Ugh. Seems like they googled 'Long Covid treatments' and wrote about what they found in the mistaken belief that it was "knowledge". This is not science.
Pragmatic = 'enables the doctor to sound as if they have something to offer, and keep charging you for the many visits as they work through...
We've split off the discussion about abdominal vascular compression syndrome and related matters to a new thread:
Gut compression syndromes; Nutcracker syndrome; Abdominal Vascular Compression Syndrome
An interesting paper from this New Jersey team.
They suggest that the problems of less efficient brain function, essentially the brain throwing a whole lot of de-synchronised effort into producing motor outcomes that are similar or worse than normal, that they found during the acute Covid-19...
That youtube video by Eiko Fried linked in the tweet above is great, well worth a listen. I'll put another link here in case something happens to the tweet:
In the last section, he comments that the same criticisms have been made about research into other sorts of therapies and mentions CBT...
I think it's important to call a spade a spade. If we call it a functional digging implement, people will be confused, and think it might be a term that they can accept and even be proud of. 'Functional disorder' and even 'conversion disorder' leave room for a lot of ambiguity for the patient...
I wonder if McEvedy and Beard would have been interested in the Royal Free outbreak if there had not been a number of cases of persisting illness following the acute illness i.e. what seems to be straightforward ME/CFS? Was their dissection of the outbreak a means to suggest that the persisting...
Thanks Kiristar. There's a paywall to make comments on the article, but if anyone wants to use any or all of my post to build their own comment, please do so. Comments signal to the paper that there is an interest in the topic.
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