tommybrand
Established Member
Holy—I can’t believe we waited 8 years for this.
So, a bunch of the patients in the study ended up recovering completely, and most of them barely get PEM.. Makes me wonder if they're just studying people who can shake off a post-viral fatigue easier than others. You know, the kind who might get better with stuff like graded exercise or the Lightning Process. Where psychological intervention may be the treatment, because you’re not that sick.
They didn't even bother to look into how patients handle PEM. Plus, the participants were mild enough to go through all their tests. How does that even start to cover what it's like for those with moderate to severe ME/CFS, who are mostly bedridden and hit PEM pretty much anytime they push too hard?
I can't help feeling like this whole study misses the mark. Eight years down the drain on what feels like the wrong crowd, wrong criteria and wrong methods. Where's the 2-day CPETs, or checking out what happens during a PEM flare-up? Where is the common sense?
This just feels like a massive step backward for the community. It's frustrating to think about how much longer people will suffer because this ‘study of the decade’ completely dropped the ball on wanting to understand what ME/CFS really is about.
On a curious note, has anyone here ever mapped out what a study really should consist of, in terms of criteria and methods? And is anyone in the scientific community actually following up on this? Or are we just holding on to the long covid crowd and hoping they will find the answer? I’m struggling to see the roadmap and way forward from here.
So, a bunch of the patients in the study ended up recovering completely, and most of them barely get PEM.. Makes me wonder if they're just studying people who can shake off a post-viral fatigue easier than others. You know, the kind who might get better with stuff like graded exercise or the Lightning Process. Where psychological intervention may be the treatment, because you’re not that sick.
They didn't even bother to look into how patients handle PEM. Plus, the participants were mild enough to go through all their tests. How does that even start to cover what it's like for those with moderate to severe ME/CFS, who are mostly bedridden and hit PEM pretty much anytime they push too hard?
I can't help feeling like this whole study misses the mark. Eight years down the drain on what feels like the wrong crowd, wrong criteria and wrong methods. Where's the 2-day CPETs, or checking out what happens during a PEM flare-up? Where is the common sense?
This just feels like a massive step backward for the community. It's frustrating to think about how much longer people will suffer because this ‘study of the decade’ completely dropped the ball on wanting to understand what ME/CFS really is about.
On a curious note, has anyone here ever mapped out what a study really should consist of, in terms of criteria and methods? And is anyone in the scientific community actually following up on this? Or are we just holding on to the long covid crowd and hoping they will find the answer? I’m struggling to see the roadmap and way forward from here.