If we are waiting for this biobabble to stop before we can recruit doctors then we will be waiting til judgement day.
It will only stop when we know the cause of ME/CFS and/or find an effective treatment. Perhaps we can (and should) persaude charities not to spread unevidenced stuff, but the 'ME is different to CFS and has 1000 proven validated biological processes' people won't stop until there is real proof they are wrong.
Frankly, I think this idea of ME/CFS patients being unbearable to work with because they have 'those beliefs' is just pure prejudice. No different to pointing to individual immigrants or black people who have committed a crime and saying 'they're all like that, thats why no-one can stand them'. Or similar prejudice about gay people or women.
How do these patient beliefs get in the way of clinicians setting up a clinic and doing a trial? They don't. Imagine refusing to treat or research cancer because some people with cancer believe it can be cured by a raw food diet. This is no different.
The physicians don't want to help us because of the stigma. But they need a reason, they need a thing to point to to say its our fault. And these beliefs patients hold in the absence of real care and real information are easy to point to as that reason.
In my opinion what is really keeping doctors out of ME care and research is the stigma and reputational damage that they will face from fellow doctors if they legitimise 'those awful people'. Unfortunately there is no way around this but to find physicians intelligent and brave enough to see past the stigma and babble and start to do the necessary work. Maybe out of the goodness of their hearts but more likely because they see the huge reputational and professional opportunity that ME/CFS research represents in the longer term - to be one of the few pioneers who saw past the bullshit and found the answers. It would be career making.
@Jonathan Edwards tell your hesitant colleagues that most of these patients with false beliefs will gladly drop the biobabble like a shot when some solid evidence emerges. That what the biobabble proves is how deep the hunger for an answer here is. That there is a real chance of finding one. If that doesn't sway them, I doubt that the biobabble is the true cause of their hesitation.
The biobabble is the inevitable consequence of the void of care and treatment that has been caused by medical neglect. We cannot stop it until we stop the neglect. And whatever these doctors might say, if they don't want to help us because a some of us mistakenly believe there is objective proof of brain inflammation, they were almost certainly never going to help us in the first place.
(I logged back in to write this because i think its important, off again now!)