Invisible Illness A History, from Hysteria to Long Covid, 2026, Mendenhall (book)

Excellent article.

I don't understand why rehabilitationists and others think that we're not entitled to the same medical care as the rest of humanity, and instead we should either adjust to our reality and make the best of it and focus on our values, instead of asking for biomedical research, or heal our underlying stress and trauma and stop trying to return to our former lives that they think are responsible for making us ill in the first place. It is a very moralistic framing.
 
heal our underlying stress and trauma and stop trying to return to our former lives that they think are responsible for making us ill in the first place
I think this perspective makes me particularly angry because I was doing precicely that when I deteriorated from mild. Trying to come to terms with and heal from trauma, build a life that was more suited to me away from academia etc etc.

And yet my voice is completely ignored by these people. My opinion counts for nothing because I listened to the same narratives they did, believed them and put them into practice, but I didn't get the results they expect and want.


I don't understand why rehabilitationists and others think that we're not entitled to the same medical care as the rest of humanity
Because they don't believe we are really legitimately ill, when it comes right down to it. They give us the same advice someone with a severe panic disorder might get - learn to adjust, learn to live with it, don't dare trouble a doctor's waiting room with your problems again.
 
I think this perspective makes me particularly angry because I was doing precicely that when I deteriorated from mild. Trying to come to terms with and heal from trauma, build a life that was more suited to me away from academia etc etc.
If that doesn't work, the explanation is that the patient has been trying too hard and should chillax but not chillax because chillaxing would mean they weren't trying hard enough.
 
Although I have to admit that I think of Dave as more of a scientist than journalist, but that might be because of his academic position and rigour. We need more journalists like that!

No problem. I didn't take offense! I am sensitive to the blame that journalists often receive, even when it's warranted, which it often is. Journalists are often doing their best and listening to those they think or are told are the experts. Most have zero training in any of this medical/biological stuff, and it's very complicated to figure out and get it right. Especially when young and relatively new to covering any of this.
 
If that doesn't work, the explanation is that the patient has been trying too hard and should chillax but not chillax because chillaxing would mean they weren't trying hard enough.
What I call the Goldilocks solution. Which, of course, needs the careful guidance of an expert to find that perfect ever elusive balance between too little and too much, and who will never accept any blame if it doesn't work, which it never does, and especially if it makes you worse, which it often does.
 
Journalists are often doing their best and listening to those they think or are told are the experts.
This is what I struggle with, to be honest. Because journalists claim they are «truth-seeking» but often write about things where they have no basis for assessing what’s true.

I have asked a couple of journalists about this, and I’ve been dismissed with «I can’t question the expert» or «I don’t know more than the expert about this». And when I’ve notified journalists about obvious mistakes (like saying that a study looked at something it definitively and very clearly did not look at at all), more often than not they seem to be unable to understand.

But at the same time, journalists frequently do question the experts and authorities. Because for some areas they’ve made it a priority to build up sufficient knowledge and experience. Like politics, finances, business and law.

For some reason, science appears to be fair game for everyone, and I frequently see juniors or even students covering it at the largest outlets.
 
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