News from Belgium

Long COVID and return to work: a qualitative study 2022 Kohn et al
This study, unfortunately paywalled, is from the Belgian Healthcare Knowledge Centre.

One hundred and thirty-four people participated in the study. Participants described various clinical symptoms precluding their return to work. They also face sceptical reactions from employers and colleagues and a lack of support from the social welfare system to facilitate their return to work.
 
From: Dr. Marc-Alexander Fluks
Subject: Webinar: Training for physicians on YPWCs, March 9, 2023 [in Dutch]


For those of you understanding Dutch: There is an online training by
Leuven University, Belgium, for physicians on YPWCs.

Title: The tired Adolescent
Station: Pentalfa
Leuven University
Date: March 9 2023
Time: 19:00 UTC
URL:
https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/sessies/de-vermoeide-adolescent/
Google translation:
https://gbiomed-kuleuven-be.transla..._sl=nl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=nl&_x_tr_pto=wapp
Rerun: https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/herbekijken/
Email: pentalfa@kuleuven.be
Registration: https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/sub/?webinarRegister=true&sessie=304497
 
From: Dr. Marc-Alexander Fluks


May 11, the University Leuven 'Continuing Education Programme' Pentalfa
in Belgium will organize a free online symposium (in Dutch) on
Post-Covid, including ME/CFS, for MDs.

Date: May 11, 2023
Time: 18:00 UTC
URL: http://www.pentalfa.be
WebTV:
https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/algemene-informatie/zoom-webinar/
Google translation from Dutch to English,

https://gbiomed-kuleuven-be.transla..._sl=nl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=wapp

Info is available at,

https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/sessies/langdurige-klachten-na-covid-19/
Google-translation from Dutch to English,

https://gbiomed-kuleuven-be.transla..._sl=nl&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=wapp

Register at,

https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/sub/?webinarRegister=true&sessie=304608

The symposium will be archived online at,
https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/pentalfa/herbekijken/
 
Dr. Elke Van Hoof is a psychologist who previously worked with Kenny De Meirleir and published several papers on CFS. She then moved to other things such as burnout and hypersensitivity. In the articles, her team accused her of toxic leadership. She also made some questionable claims about Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) as a treatment for burn-out.
 
https://www.vrt.be/vrtnws/nl/2024/0...replein-voor-vergeten-slachtoffers-chronisch/
Automatic translation:
Action in Brussels for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome: "Doctors often think it is all in the mind"


To mark World ME/CFS Day, an awareness campaign for the forgotten disease 'myalgic encephalomyelitis' or chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) took place on Place Brouckère in Brussels. The organizers demand better care and more scientific research.


BRUZZ

Sat May 11 16:59

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a chronic disease that causes extreme exhaustion, pain and cognitive impairment. The disease usually occurs after an infection and is described by patients as a perpetual flu.

In Belgium, an estimated 20,000 to 45,000 patients suffer from ME/CFS, but the cause of the disease is unknown and there is no effective treatment yet. With a campaign in which dozens of empty shoes were displayed, symbolizing the millions of patients who have disappeared from public life worldwide due to the disease, the non-profit organization 12ME is now drawing attention to their situation.

"There is a need for better training of healthcare providers and doctors in Belgium," says chairman Kristien De Vos. "Because there is not yet a clear medical test for ME/CFS, doctors still too often think that the condition is all in their head. As a result, the disease is treated incorrectly and patients encounter stigma and misunderstanding."

12ME therefore advocates better care and more scientific research into the disease. Germany and the Netherlands have now drawn up a research program following a European resolution from 2020, but Belgium is still lagging behind.
 
Wanneer sporten je gezondheid in gevaar brengt
https://www.eoswetenschap.eu/psyche-brein/wanneer-sporten-je-gezondheid-gevaar-brengt

Automated English translation:
When exercise puts your health at risk
https://www-eoswetenschap-eu.transl...uto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-US&_x_tr_pto=wapp

https://www-eoswetenschap-eu.transl...uto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-US&_x_tr_pto=wapp
Jolien Hendrix

Jolien Hendrix is a PhD researcher at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and KU Leuven. Her research focuses on the role of epigenetics and the autonomic nervous system in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and fibromyalgia. She compares patients with healthy individuals to investigate which biological abnormalities could explain their symptoms. The research is supervised by professor Jo Nijs, professor Lode Godderis and dr. Andrea Polli and is funded by FWO.



 
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Petition for Long covid, MEcfs, Lyme, Pots and Fibromyalgia patients in Belgium

(Saw the petition started in April 2024, but did not see it shared in this thread.)

 
Belgium's share of people on long term sick leave reaches record highs: 600k in a 11M population. Recently, a report leaked that claims up to 59% of those people are actually fit to work.

ME/CFS has come up in the margin. Last week, Ruben Mersch used ME/CFS as an example of "illness without disease", but what I really want to share here is a response from Boudewijn Van Houdenhove, a professor-psychiatrist. In this response, he defends the illness experience of ME/CFS patients, but also argues in favor of the biopsychosocial approach.

The article is paywalled and in Dutch. Some machine-translated snippets:

I learned that the “illness” aspect of those conditions — the suffering of the patients — is in any case genuine. It also became clear to me that many of them are confronted with misunderstanding, dismissal, and stigmatizing remarks.
In ME/CFS patients, there are indications that their immune system — often after an infection, prolonged stress, or a combination of both — remains stuck in a mildly activated state. This affects the brain and results in physical, mental, or emotional exertion triggering a flu-like feeling of malaise. Those underlying disease-related aspects presumably also play a role in burnout and long covid.
  • I am not sure how "stuck in a mildly activated state" translates to biology but I suspect it's not very accurate. Could someone help me with this?
  • The comparison to burnout, a phenomenon that resolves with rest and removal of a stressor, drags down the gravity of ME/CFS
  • The "body stuck in state X" narrative has been used in the past to argue for GET, CBT, brain retraining and the like
  • Prolonged stress as a trigger, I'm not sure about either (*)
As long as the disease mechanisms are not fully unraveled and treatable, rehabilitation remains the key concept, preferably as early as possible.
This, to me, gives the impression that the illness can be overcome if patients would just try hard enough. Perhaps in GET, CBT or 'pacing up'. False expectations, false hope.
Furthermore, I noticed that the stories I heard were often filled with accumulated physical and/or psychosocial problems. Traumatic experiences — including those from early childhood — were not uncommon.
Some more psychologisation through anecdotes. I'm pretty sure there is no good evidence for childhood trauma being more prevalent in MECFS than in other illnesses. (*)
The discussion about people who are long-term “ill without disease” should not start from a distinction between illness and disease, but from a broad bio-psycho-social view of illness and health. Otherwise, those unfortunate people risk remaining the pariahs of our medical system.
The bio-, the psycho- and the social aspects of ME/CFS should get exactly the same ratio of attention as they do in cancer, diabetes or polio. But they don't. The psychologisation of MECFS under the guise of a BPS approach is a fundamental contributor to the "misunderstanding, dismissal, and stigmatizing" the author aims to address.


(*) I am searching for some discussions/conclusions/evidence on the relevance of childhood trauma and prolonged stress. I'll come back to update with my conclusions. In the meantime, could anyone point me in the right direction?
 
I am not sure how "stuck in a mildly activated state" translates to biology but I suspect it's not very accurate. Could someone help me with this?

It does not really mean anything specific enough to be useful. There isn't any reliable evidence of activation. There is circumstantial evidence for a shift in the way the immune system is signalling to brain and perhaps other tissues but it is in no way direct or conclusive.

Taken together with the other claims I see this as rationalisation making use of what seems convenient but without any real insight.
 
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