Mark Edwards and Jon stone are on the medical advisory board.
There's a section of questions, all written in caps. I won't replicate it here, but caps text is a very odd choice for a population that has brain fog and visual disturbances listed as symptoms.
"The most common treatment is cognitive behavioural therapy, which some people have found to be helpful. Whether it does improve your physical symptoms or not, cbt may help you to find ways to cope with the symptoms and with some of the new challenges you may face. You may be one of the 13%
1 that does benefit. However, do not feel discouraged if you give it your all, but are not cured or see little improvement in your physical symptoms. Your new coping tools can be very helpful"
I can't see what the reference there is for the 13% statistic.
The website is a great example of BPS thinking in transition. Now it's no longer necessary to have psychological trauma, and there's acknowledgement that CBT won't necessarily help, and that most people aren't cured. There's more of an acknowledgement that no one really knows what is going on - but still 'do some CBT anyway'.
FND is presented as a single condition with a range of symptoms:
overactive bladder
irritable bowel syndrome
chronic pain - fibromyalgia, complex regional pain syndrome
brain fog - which includes tiredness
memory loss
dissociative amnesia
depersonalisation
gait and movement issues (freezing, foot drag, balance issues); tremors, tics; paralysis; weakness
headaches and migraines
functional seizures
insomnia and hypersomnia
inability to speak, stuttering, slurred speech
visual changes and photophobia
Interestingly, in the list of symptoms, there was no heading for CFS or even fatigue. Fatigue is mentioned as an accompanying symptom,
e.g.
Slurred speech may accompany other symptoms:
<basically all of the symptoms mentioned above, as well as fatigue and depression>
There is significant overlap between FM and chronic fatigue syndrome.
I wonder why they didn't throw ME/CFS into the FND bin - they have included pretty much everything else that can't currently be explained. There's promotion of exercise - maybe they felt including ME/CFS as an FND is more trouble than its worth.
There is likely to be pressure from everyday life or a particularly symptomatic day to deviate from your exercise routine. However, it is imperative that you continue a regimen at any level, even if you have to do less than baseline, in order to maintain a routine.