Shinygleamy
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Note she says "many patients do recover from chronic fatigue symptoms", not syndrome.
For a good few years I had symptoms of chronic fatigue, and eventually got through it, but am certain I never suffered from ME/CFS; indeed when I saw a doctor they never even mentioned ME/CFS to me. I can say this confidently because my wife has ME/CFS, and although there is some symptom overlap, my case lacked PEM, and there was not the shattering physical exhaustion like my wife gets, even though I used to feel very "heady" and listless. People with the sort of condition I had (chronic fatigue, not chronic fatigue syndrome) very likely do have a good chance of recovering, and indeed it was exercise that helped me to do that. But I never suffered from an abnormal physiological intolerance to exercise, ever!
So yes, their clinics may well be helping people suffering from simple chronic fatigue, whose condition is not rooted in a physiological intolerance to exercise, but they must stop pretending it is ME/CFS they are treating! But the new NICE guideline is not about those patients at all! It is about people who do have ME/CFS, whose condition is rooted in an abnormal physiological intolerance to exercise.
The huge problem with people like LTS is they do not recognise, maybe cannot even comprehend, the major distinction between the two illness groups, normal tolerance to exercise on the one hand (chronic fatigue), versus abnormal intolerance to exercise on the other hand (ME/CFS).
That's a very good point. The Nice guidelines are not for chronic fatigue! Why should they be allowed to put ME/Cfs folks into severe illness for a chronic fatigue policy that has no greater benifit to chronic fatigue, that time and your own urge to do things wouldn't do anyway.
Also if it was only a tiny minority of militant patients trying to stop them where is the large patient campaign group trying to make sure these services continue, if they're so fabulous!!!. It's notable that those patients cured by such methods just don't exist in any notable numbers. More often than not they appear to be ghost patients that are often mentioned but have no evidence of actual existence.
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