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  1. Kitty

    “They seemed to be like cogs working in different directions”: a longitudinal qualitative study on Long COVID healthcare services in [UK], 2024, Fang+

    I reckon so. As usual, it misses the point that what patients really need is help with all the crap that happens when the rug gets pulled from under your feet, and most of it isn't medical.
  2. Kitty

    Time-dependent complexity characterisation of activity patterns in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome 2024 Rabaey et al

    My mate (who claimed his name was Myx O'Lydian) used to make up codswallop like this and post it on Wikipedia. I'm wondering if he's at it again.
  3. Kitty

    UK: Voting in government elections

    The issue is that organisations, government bodies, etc now insist on photo ID. My cousin had to apply for a provisional driving licence for her elderly mum-in-law when was widowed, as the combination of an insistence on photo ID and some of the couple's accounts and paperwork only being in...
  4. Kitty

    Functional Neurological Disorder (FND) - articles, social media and discussion

    I hadn't heard about this, but I wonder if the denial was meant to be aimed more at healthcare professionals? I can see why it would be misunderstood as an attack on patients, even if it was actually meant in the spirit of support. People with ME have been pushed into a black hole created by...
  5. Kitty

    Review The vicious cycle of [FND]s: a synthesis of healthcare professionals’ views on working with patients, 2020, Barnett, Tyson et al

    That would probably save a lot of money, morbidity and lives...but I guess it also risks creating so many sub- and cross-specialisms that you eventually end up reinventing general practice!
  6. Kitty

    Review The vicious cycle of [FND]s: a synthesis of healthcare professionals’ views on working with patients, 2020, Barnett, Tyson et al

    Fair points. Perhaps I should have said something like cynically made-up diagnosis. Because whilst it was initially reasonable to formulate and argue out the BPS theory, deploying it in clinical practice without any supporting evidence—and claiming that just knowing is evidence—is a different...
  7. Kitty

    Functional Neurological Disorder (FND) - articles, social media and discussion

    I was just about to post the following... It's the hijack that bothers me. If doctors recognise a cluster of signs and symptoms for which a cause hasn't yet been found, they will give it a name. If they don't know how to treat it, they will say so. That's one thing. It's quite another for...
  8. Kitty

    Review The vicious cycle of [FND]s: a synthesis of healthcare professionals’ views on working with patients, 2020, Barnett, Tyson et al

    This also holds if patients are given a made-up diagnosis. And no level of confidence or authority will negate its made-up-ness.
  9. Kitty

    UK: Voting in government elections

    A reminder that if anyone in GB is struggling for general-purpose photo ID, a provisional driving licence is the cheapest at £34 if you apply online. It doesn't matter if you've no intention of ever driving, and like a passport they last for 10 years. As @Wits_End says, you don't need this kind...
  10. Kitty

    Post-Exertional Malaise - a discussion including defining and measuring PEM

    The trouble with that will be the fairy folk, who swap our fuel tank every night for a different one. We wake up with no idea whether we've got a moped, a bus, a car, or a toy train that only moves if somebody pushes it.
  11. Kitty

    Post-Exertional Malaise - a discussion including defining and measuring PEM

    I don't think there is. It reminds me a lot of driving a wheelchair-adapted van. They have to reduce the size of the fuel tank (invariably by an unspecified amount) to accommodate the lowered suspension, so you never actually discover what the dashboard indicator shows when you've only got a...
  12. Kitty

    Post-Exertional Malaise - a discussion including defining and measuring PEM

    The second description seems to be more common, but people do use and understand terms differently. Rolling PEM is really common in mildly affected people. I had it almost continuously when I was working; I was exceeding my capacity every day during the week, and resting up at weekends just...
  13. Kitty

    How can you tell if a supplement brand is good one?

    B12 deficiency, plus low vitamin D if I don't supplement. (I might have the world's best skin type for vitamin D production, but it also means you get sunburn in England in March!)
  14. Kitty

    How can you tell if a supplement brand is good one?

    I've often consulted VeryWell, it is useful. For major brands it would probably be too much of a business risk to deliberately split production between tested and non-tested batches. I guess there are sometimes compromises made due to supply issues, but it takes a lot of work and a lot of money...
  15. Kitty

    USA Minnesota - Dr Tam

    That's impressive. Not as much as the old lady on my mam's estate who cut the chip out of her bus pass and glued it to a magic wand, but still.
  16. Kitty

    The causes that aren't genetic or pathogenic

    It's also muddied by the apparent existence of a post EBV-like group, who have significant symptoms but they do eventually resolve. There's still a major impact on their lives—six months to a year is quite long enough to lose your job or be forced out of a home you can't afford on sick pay—but...
  17. Kitty

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

    I've thought about this too, but I wonder if symptoms are part of the difficulty. What matters to me is what I can do. That's partly governed by how I feel, of course, but also by an assessment of current capacity and the likelihood of unspeakable payback. I think if I were keeping a record...
  18. Kitty

    The causes that aren't genetic or pathogenic

    You should definitely enter functional fungus and psychosomatic spoons for a prize in the Pompous Parsnips thread. :rofl:
  19. Kitty

    The causes that aren't genetic or pathogenic

    I feel the same, because there were also three of us (though not at the same time). Also, I have two close but unrelated friends that I've shared houses with, and we all developed ME (again, not at the same time). But there three or more cases of all sorts of other things as well, in both...
  20. Kitty

    The causes that aren't genetic or pathogenic

    AKA luck. I agree—it might turn out that there's some fascinating combination of events that are necessary, but it seems just as likely there aren't.
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