Look at slide 5 of Myhill's talk, and tell me why she should be allowed to claim (as if with total conviction and authority) that ME = CFS + Inflammation. Just a nonsensical equation.
Also, it's full of people (literally) shitting themselves because she advises taking insane amounts of Vitamin C. And they're really into iodine salt pipes, apparently. Awful.
I'm on the Myhill 'followers' facebook group. It makes me audibly ghasp almost daily. I have a collection of screenshots of some of the most absurd posts on there. It's like pseudoscience bingo. Yesterday, in response to the coronavirus post someone linked to a guy claiming to cure it using...
I'm starting to think that these pieces might be best just focusing on what ME/CFS is, rather than what it isn't.
Imagine going to a job interview and spending the first half of the conversation saying "People have called me lazy, untrustworthy, and a shirker, but actually I'm the opposite."...
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/327486.php#3
"A group of researchers has brought the idea of food as a medicine one step closer. They have identified certain common foodstuffs that alter our microbiome."
https://www.ed.ac.uk/inflammation-research/postgraduate-training/phd-programme/research-projects
The M.E. project is one of several advertised on this page.
Mentions the GWAS study....
I have seen similar articles in the past, perhaps from the same website. Bizzarely, they often come from people who otherwise have a good knowledge of M.E. I don't know what such articles aim to achieve.
I'm a cynical bugger online, so let me do something productive and positive, and link you to downloadable PDF copies of the posters: https://www.roche.com/sustainability/philanthropy/science_education/pathways/pathways-ordering.htm
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