I completely understand where you're coming from, @unicorn7. I certainly also feel that people underestimate the degree of disability and suffering PwMEs experience, and they don't take that into account when weighing up pro's and con's of medications.
But I've been there, and corticosteroiods give with one hand, and take away with the other. You can end up worse than when you started. And yes, a person who takes a low enough dose might avoid some of the worst of the side effects, but they'll miss out on any benefits as well, because their body will soon adjust by making less cortisol itself. Then when they try to stop, they can be worse off than before they started.
I think we imagine that people with "legitimate" diseases get access to all these drugs because people take them seriously (e.g. RA, MS). But I'm noticing more and more that even in these diseases, the focus is often on stopping measurable decline, and the person is left pretty much to their own devices to deal with debilitating fatigue and malaise (or worse, given psychological treatment). Pretty much like us.
That is sometimes the feeling I get, that this disease is still not "legitimate" enough to even think about giving any medication.
That is exactly the reason I woud like to see a lot more research on these kinds of low hanging fruits. We don't know.We don't know the side effects, we don't know what it does, we don't know why it works when it works.
I am now weighing the pro's and con's of my N=1 case without any knowledge whatsoever. Maybe I am giving away long term health, for short term gain, I don't know. I would love to know more, to make a better decision.