Where current guidance has been issued, such as the statement from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence5 cautioning against graded exercise therapy in the context of covid-19, it should be communicated quickly to clinicians on the front line.
- Patient involvement—patients must be involved in the commissioning of clinical services and the design of research studies.
Do people with post-viral sequelae from Wuhan Virus NCOV-2019-SARS-2 typically have PEM? We get it not only from “exercise” but from many ordinary functions which are not perceived as an effort by people in low-average health. Perhaps they only tire more easily than normal, but they don’t have the 24-48 hour worsening that we do.A step forward but it is a shame they did not mention the possible symptom of post exertional malaise as an indicator that exercise might be contra indicated.
!!!!!!!!!!!!Medicine can't function with having to require physicians to personally experience a disease before they can see that it is, in fact, a disease.
Do people with post-viral sequelae from Wuhan Virus NCOV-2019-SARS-2 typically have PEM? We get it not only from “exercise” but from many ordinary functions which are not perceived as an effort by people in low-average health. Perhaps they only tire more easily than normal, but they don’t have the 24-48 hour worsening that we do.
Or perhaps they do. I think we should make no assumptions and look for enough data before making any public statement.
Failure to understand the underlying biological mechanisms causing these persisting symptoms risks missing opportunities to identify risk factors, prevent chronicity, and find treatment approaches for people affected now and in the future.
Before we get people exercising, it’s important to be sure that it’s going to be safe.
A reliance on “one size fits all” online rehabilitation services risks serious harm to patients if pathology goes undetected
...However it will take time before it is clear that for them a diagnosis of ME is the most appropriate, with or without other concurrent conditions, or if we will need a new distinct diagnosis.
Patient involvement—patients must be involved in the commissioning of clinical services and the design of research studies.
“No decision without me”6—lessons learnt from other illnesses have shown the importance of involving those most affected. Patients experiencing persisting symptoms of covid-197 have a great deal to contribute to the search for solutions. Involving patients in research design8 and the commissioning of clinical services will ensure that the patient perspective is listened to and will optimise the development of such studies and clinical services. This may take the form of representatives from patient formed groups, which may include signatories of this letter, liaising with policy makers, researchers, and healthcare leaders.
Notwithstanding the potential for such creative conflict, a significant challenge for patient-led research is that it is often (understandably) underpinned by “cognitive passions”—that is, deeply-held, emotionally-charged perspectives on a condition. While such passions give energy and focus to a patient-led research agenda, they may mean that patients find it difficult to approach research into their own condition with the equipoise expected in science. However, while one high-profile patient-scientist conflict seemed to generate negative tension (chronic fatigue syndrome [28]); there are many counter-examples of conflicts that were highly productive, including in rare diseases, HIV/AIDS, mental health, and breast cancer.