It says on the FAQ for the project (http://www.megaresearch.me.uk/qanda/) that they plan to include housebound and bedbound patients, that they aren't committing to a particular criteria of ME because it means that they can compare different diagnostic criteria in the data and see how it changes results, and that they haven't settled on a definition of PEM, but they've given an example of defining PEM as an increase in symptoms, and that the patient advisory group will have input on the definition. The site also only says that the purpose of the project is to collect very large amounts of biological data from people who have been diagnosed by clinicians, and analyze it.That was the lip service, but the details indicate that biological research is more of a "maybe some day with more funding" proposition, with the core funding being proposed primarily to finance the collection of questionnaire responses. They aren't going to include homebound or bedbound patients, and will not commit to using an acceptable criteria of ME/CFS, primarily due to defining PEM as post-exertional "stress" rather than an exacerbation of neurological, immunological, and/or muscular symptoms.
The proposed lead investigators of the project were Peter White and Esther Crawley, both long-time psychosocial proponents who habitually employ poor methodology and substantial spin to guarantee positive results. Peter White dropped out of the project, possibly due to the protest of his involvement, but Crawley seems to still be intending to lead it - it is her project. Undoubtedly some of the other people involved create quality research, but that would be unlikely to happen with Crawley controlling it, especially if their expertise is not being used and research primarily involves psych questionnaires.
Esther Crawley is also overwhelmingly outnumbered by everyone else on the project. It doesn't seem very objectionable to me. It actually seems like a really good thing.
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