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  1. rvallee

    UK - NHS England online tool and clinics for long Covid.

    Many Long Covid clinics are just as awful as the "fatigue" clinics. They're truly making their parents proud, achieve the same level of being offensively wrong.
  2. rvallee

    Open Medicine Foundation (OMF)

    Basically a way to turn the symptoms list patients bring into a format that will be accepted, rather than glanced then ignored? Interesting. Could be very useful. Obviously one of the main obstacles to achieving any progress is that over 90% of the illness is simply ignored, information thrown...
  3. rvallee

    Neuropsychiatry’s Role in the Postacute Sequelae of COVID-19: Report From the American Neuropsychiatric Association Committee on Research, 2022,Baslet

    Ah, well, nevertheless. It sure would have been nice to have those by now. But I guess pretending those exist should keep working for a while, at least as long as no one expects anything out of this specialty. How could we possibly pass on the opportunity of using "have you tried not thinking...
  4. rvallee

    UK: All Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus, March 2022 onwards

    That horse has stormed out of the barn a loooooong time ago. It's weird that people speak of things that have been happening for years as if they could be avoided in the future. Jaime Seltzer put it marvelously today, something like you can't predict the future if you're still negotiating with...
  5. rvallee

    Long Covid in the media and social media 2022

    There is a US senate hearing today where Fauci was asked questions about LC, some mentions of how the $1.15B NIH program is going (not at all encouraging, they appear to be wasting the whole thing by relying on health records):
  6. rvallee

    Assessment and Management of Long COVID, 2022, Rivas-Vazquez et al

    Wow, even by the usual standards, this is awful. Zero clue. I got curious WTH could this CSBS be and wow is this just terrible: The most urgent and immediate focus has been placed on identifying and developing effective therapeutic interventions during the acute phase of the illness; however...
  7. rvallee

    News from Aotearoa/New Zealand and the Pacific Islands

    Every time I see comments like this I see a setup for failure. A problem does not have to be come catastrophically unmanageable to be a problem. This is exactly like people saying healthcare services will be swamped from each wave, and they are, but since people aren't dying on the street in...
  8. rvallee

    Long Covid in the media and social media 2022

    Bit more analysis on that: And unfortunately, some reporters have gotten the framing of "do not want job because of long-term sickness" and retained only the "do not want jobs" part:
  9. rvallee

    Oxytocin, the panacea for long-COVID? a review, 2022, Diep et al

    In hindsight, building academia on the need to publish as many papers as possible, regardless of quality, may not have been the smartest of ideas.
  10. rvallee

    The associations of long-COVID symptoms, clinical characteristics and affective psychological constructs in a non-hospitalized cohort, 2022, Ocsovszky

    What this shows, bizarrely, is that these healthcare professionals are completely baffled by the concept of illness, and genuinely cannot understand that asking sick people how they're doing will yield the expected response of: not great. As in literally the entire idea that being ill is a bad...
  11. rvallee

    USA Centers for Disease Control (CDC) news (including ME/CFS Stakeholder Engagement and Communication Calls) - next call 4 Dec 2024

    They won't admit they were wrong. At this point it must have to do with liability, as long as they don't admit they were wrong, ME can continue to be suppressed. There is precedent for class-action lawsuits about medical advice that continued after it was known to be wrong. Until it's admitted...
  12. rvallee

    I was in pain for years. After I was repeatedly told I just had ‘bad periods’, a giant cyst was found on my ovary. By Holly Bourne. The Times (London)

    This is ominous. For years UK physicians said the guidelines bound them about ME. Turns out it's basically arbitrary and services just do whatever they feel like doing. It's frankly hard to find areas of healthcare that aren't massively broken. In Canada we don't really have national...
  13. rvallee

    Peptic ulcer and the discovery of Helicobacter pylori - from skepticism to the Nobel Prize

    The asymmetry of bullshit in action. Once something wrong has gotten its legs on, it takes disproportionate efforts to slow it down before it can be replaced. It's sad that not only does it also apply in medicine, it seems to be especially strong because of the rigid hierarchical nature of...
  14. rvallee

    Trisha Greenhalgh on ME/CFS and Long Covid

    LOL. "I'm going to continue blocking". Later on write tweet saying "Don't just block people". Amazing.
  15. rvallee

    Open Using activity tracking and just-in-time messaging to improve adaptive pacing in people with long COVID: a pragmatic randomised control trial

    Says everything. Little chance this produces anything useful, or that they understand the basics of what's going on. It's not a freaking treatment anymore than avoiding smoke is a treatment for asthma. This whole paradigm of pragmatic trials is a useless mess, too many factors to take into...
  16. rvallee

    Who is Simon Wessely?

    GLOMAR. Figures. Would be useful to revisit this, in light of the official line having been (possibly) debunked. What matters anyway is that it was just an official lie.
  17. rvallee

    News from Scandinavia

    Wow, OK. Thank you! I'm seeing similar things back and forth lately and it seemed relevant, all about RN's conflicts of interests. It's frankly a bizarre letter, talking about prophecies (it's been 2 years, this isn't the distant future) and pre-empting... something that's been happening for 2...
  18. rvallee

    News from Australia

    Long COVID clinics likely to be required across the country https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/clinical/long-covid-clinics-likely-to-be-required-across-th ‘We know from the experience overseas that people were going to get long COVID, and we believe that now we’re playing catch up and it’s...
  19. rvallee

    Trisha Greenhalgh on ME/CFS and Long Covid

    See, she only blocks pwME because of abuse. Only reason she blocks people, is what she says. Or do we fall under disinformation? Unfortunately, few people can ask her, being blocked and all. It appears though that she is also blocking minimizers and other BGD types.
  20. rvallee

    In which way could Psychiatry and Psychology help investigate ME/CFS (and what exactly is Neuropsychiatry?)–Discussion Thread

    Probably nothing without massive reforms. Even most of the DSM constructs don't have much validity, are too superficial. The technology just isn't there yet, psychiatry is basically at the stage genetics was before the discovery of DNA, along with the technology to do something with it. It...
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