Yes, I wondered that too.
The 'Towards a Better Understanding... 2023' paper says
To recap, this is what they said
"Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is the name given to a post-viral/stressor syndrome that develops in the susceptible 5-10% of the population after a triggering event"
A lifetime risk is the combined risk of getting ME/CFS after EBV, and after each Covid-19 infection (and we know someone can get Covid-19 and be fine, and then get Covid-19 again and get ME/CFS), and after each flu infection and after Q fever and after Ross River Fever and so on. And the authors suggest that exposure to agrichemicals can cause ME/CFS as can
And that combined risk for an individual may be modified by details of the triggers (what agrichemical?, what dose of toxin or pathogen? what strain? other environmental issues that we don't know about yet (e.g, maybe how hot you were when you were infected), and host issues such as genetics and age and sex that we are only beginning to understand. Not to mention random stuff.
Susceptibility doesn't even require the person to actually develop ME/CFS. It's a measure of the percentage of people who could develop ME/CFS if they were exposed to a feasible combination of factors that trigger it. Maybe no one is safe.
I know all this is detail, but it's indicative of the statements being made without evidence and without being mindful of the impact. There are dozens of statements that could be picked apart in the same way and found to not have a good basis.
(sorry for the edits fixing stuff)
The 'Towards a Better Understanding... 2023' paper says
But that's not an individual's lifetime 'susceptibility to ME/CFS'. EBV is not the only potential cause of ME/CFS.A common initiator of ME/CFS is infection with the endemic virus, Epstein Barr Virus, that causes glandular fever, and yet it is estimated that perhaps only one in 10–20 develop the post-viral syndrome after being infected with this common virus [5].
To recap, this is what they said
"Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is the name given to a post-viral/stressor syndrome that develops in the susceptible 5-10% of the population after a triggering event"
A lifetime risk is the combined risk of getting ME/CFS after EBV, and after each Covid-19 infection (and we know someone can get Covid-19 and be fine, and then get Covid-19 again and get ME/CFS), and after each flu infection and after Q fever and after Ross River Fever and so on. And the authors suggest that exposure to agrichemicals can cause ME/CFS as can
That's a lot of potential triggers in a lifetime.stressors like major surgery, or simply a challenging life event or an underlying health condition
And that combined risk for an individual may be modified by details of the triggers (what agrichemical?, what dose of toxin or pathogen? what strain? other environmental issues that we don't know about yet (e.g, maybe how hot you were when you were infected), and host issues such as genetics and age and sex that we are only beginning to understand. Not to mention random stuff.
Susceptibility doesn't even require the person to actually develop ME/CFS. It's a measure of the percentage of people who could develop ME/CFS if they were exposed to a feasible combination of factors that trigger it. Maybe no one is safe.
I know all this is detail, but it's indicative of the statements being made without evidence and without being mindful of the impact. There are dozens of statements that could be picked apart in the same way and found to not have a good basis.
(sorry for the edits fixing stuff)
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