I think the issue as per usual is that the staff treating her seem to think she doesn’t have ME she’s just addicted to cyclazine/attention seeking/being difficult.
This is a problem we all face but it’s a million times worse when you’re so severe.
I think
no known effective treatments
Is powerful, because the likes of BACME seem to think they’re able to do cures, and everything about ME/CFS services at this point in 2026 really needs to remember that what it ‘can’ help with is ‘management’.
Obviously the likes of magical brain...
I don’t even like myself for writing this but…
There are no effective treatments
Before the usual suspects appear, to blather on about brain training and neuroplasticity and manifesting magical elves or whatever it is today, and the conversation gets diverted to whatever BACME and the ME A are...
We could call it institutional systemic abuse, but that would really lead to extensive discussions of our word choice.
The main point being to DARVO and reframe it as us being baddies, ensuring the conversation we’re trying to have is never had.
A number of posts have been moved from a thread about a named person who has been hospitalised.
This posts refers to emails to decision makers about the care of the person.
I doubt anyone even reads these emails, but on mine I included some questions
- if the photophobia is thought to be...
The wording used won’t affect the outcome.
And patients have a right to describe the abuse in any words they wish.
And patients already do a lot of bending and twisting themselves, their words, their presentation, so as not to upset the Dr and maybe be treated.
If you don’t like the term...
Gaslighting is specific in that it denies what the patient says and further it convinces them the situation is different.
Telling a patient to find their baseline is gaslighting as there’s no such thing as a baseline
Telling a patient they will improve when they do x,y,z is gaslighting because...
I wouldn’t risk defaming him by suggesting it meets SLAPP unless you’re legally advised.
People on the internet throw about accusations of things like defamation in the casual conversational meaning all the time, it’s very frustrating. Instead of confusing the matters using legal terms with...
Point is it’s not enforceable.
The first test is would you win defamation? I already write about that.
Second test is would invoking SLAPP in the UK result in any action? No, there aren’t any laws or legislation relating to SLAPP in the UK. Parliament has never drafted any and there’s a lack of...
Just a concept. There is no law. The law is defamation.
In any case I’m not discussing it further because it’s a pointless exercise for a non-lawyer.
Anyone wishing to take such a case can seek proper legal advice.
This kind of debate is why I say defamation is incredibly complex. What I understand about it is that I know very little. But I know enough to know that it’s complex, requires specialist legal advice and is costly. It’s absolutely a quagmire and not something a lay person should attempt.
You’ve quoted the section on juristrictional variations, the UK is listed there because it has different laws, specifically Defamation is cited.
The Introdution section talks about court cases in Denver? And the First Amendment of the US constitution.
You may wish to state that something meets...
So my knowledge of Defamation (more libel than slander) comes from a media perspective, I really don’t have enough knowledge of the subject to answer your question - but it’s a great question and I’d like to know the answer.
My guesses would be the institutions involved in previous...
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