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  1. ME/CFS Science Blog

    A new consensus? - ME/CFS skeptic blog

    I often have the impression that ME/CFS is an edge case in medicine, one where the advocacy community is quite active and vocal and thus exposes a lot of the deeper problems. These include: The popularity of unfounded psychosomatic theories for illnesses that medicine cannot yet explain or...
  2. ME/CFS Science Blog

    A new consensus? - ME/CFS skeptic blog

    Good point. The situation is so absurd it is hard to describe accurately to outsiders.
  3. ME/CFS Science Blog

    A new consensus? - ME/CFS skeptic blog

    I don't think it is an official term though, probably more like slang. https://www.vlaamswoordenboek.be/definities/term/Belgisch%20compromis Don't have plans to submit this to a journal, it was more a case of writing down my thoughts before I forget. It is interesting to see how these new...
  4. ME/CFS Science Blog

    A new consensus? - ME/CFS skeptic blog

    I've written some of my thoughts about the new reports and guidelines on ME/CFS that have been published over the past 5 years. They seem to form a new consensus, one where PEM is a required criterium for ME/CFS, where GET is no longer recommended and CBT is proposed as a supportive treatment...
  5. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    I have the impression that the final result is more the result of diplomacy and politics than scientific assessment of the evidence. Take for example the description they use for CBT: "This Therapy should help to better deal with the mental stress caused by the disease. In this way...
  6. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    Looking back at the report the main thing that stands out is that they only looked at studies that required 80% of patients to have PEM. This meant that they disregarded about 90% of all RCTs. That is a much more extreme position than the NICE committee which only downgraded the quality of...
  7. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    There is also a longer page on treatments which can be viewed here: https://www.gesundheitsinformation.de/behandlung-von-mecfs.html It presents pacing, CBT, physical activation and sleep hygiëne as treatment options but all with little evidence. on GET they write: "A targeted, gradual...
  8. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    Here's a comparison of the summary section on treatment in the draft versus the final report. The bolding is mine because it seems that this is an important sentence that was removed. Before: ME/CFS may have different causes in different people. In addition, the severity and type of symptoms...
  9. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    Skimmed through the report. It seems that they toned down their statements on GET and CBT and changed their prevalence estimates but that not much else has changed. They previously only relied on the 0.1% prevalence estimate of the Nacul et al. 2011 study because that is the only one that...
  10. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    Does anyone know to which study they are referring here on page 7 of the PDF, in the introduction: "Eine erste Studie zur Verbesserung der Versorgung mit einem speziell auf ME/CFS angepassten Rehabilitionskonzept ist in Deutschland bereits gestartet."
  11. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    This seems to be the link to the final report: https://www.iqwig.de/download/n21-01_me-cfs-aktueller-kenntnisstand_abschlussbericht_v1-0.pdf
  12. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Germany: IQWIG Report to government on ME/CFS - report out now May 2023

    This looks a bit similar to the info the CDC provides, especially the part on GET and CBT. Not great but not bad either, probably a significant improvement from having no info or guideline at all?
  13. ME/CFS Science Blog

    UK:ME Association funds research for a new clinical assessment toolkit in NHS ME/CFS specialist services, 2023

    I was wondering the same thing. I'm quite skeptical that there are good quality tools to assess services.
  14. ME/CFS Science Blog

    News from Belgium

    Thanks for sharing.
  15. ME/CFS Science Blog

    The science of craniocervical instability and other spinal issues and their possible connection with ME/CFS - discussion thread

    His website still states: "I offer consulting services. These are distinct from medical services, and I do not offer medical services. I have no financial interest in connecting people with any specific doctors." https://www.explorewithjeff.com/
  16. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Join the Research Momentum with OMF’s StudyME

    Not sure if it is a good idea to let patients decide which topic of ME/CFS studies they would like to participate in. This will only increase selection bias and provides little benefit. Patients might think: "I don't have symptom X so I'm not interested in participating in those studies" etc.
  17. ME/CFS Science Blog

    The Netherlands - €28.5 million ME/CFS research program - ZonMW funding awards announced April 2023

    I think this is a central question. Lifelines has previously published on CFS but this was based on self-report which is probably not very reliable. I would assume that the funding allocated by ZonMW was meant to do a full clinical examination on these patients to have more reliable ME/CFS...
  18. ME/CFS Science Blog

    The Netherlands - €28.5 million ME/CFS research program - ZonMW funding awards announced April 2023

    No, haven't seen any specific target number or details about this project. Would be interesting to learn more about it.
  19. ME/CFS Science Blog

    News from Austria and Switzerland

    Thanks. It's a rather short text apparently. I've pasted an English translation using DeepL below. Regarding ME/CFS: Recognition, medical care & protection of affected persons as well as research funding The Federal Government, and in particular the Federal Minister of Social Affairs, Health...
  20. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Socioeconomic determinants of ME/CFS in Norway: a registry study, Hilland and Anthun, 2023

    Yes the difference in income and education as risk factor are interesting. Compared to hospitalized patients, a higher income decreased the risk of ME/CFS while a higher educational attainment increased the risk.
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