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https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210227/p2a/00m/0na/023000c
TOKYO -- Discrimination, prejudice and a lack of understanding about diseases sometimes causes patients more suffering than the illnesses themselves. This was true for one case that played out on social media.
Yusuke Kida, 43, lives in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, and has myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). The disease causes severe pain across the body, but its name is not well known and its symptoms are hard to recognize from the outside. He agreed to be interviewed by the Mainichi Shimbun with the hope to "shed some light on people suffering in the same way."
full article here:Despite the severity of his symptoms, it was difficult to find a name for his condition. In fall 2019, more than six months after its onset, he was diagnosed with ME/CFS by Chiba University Hospital, the seventh he had visited. But even though he now knew the disease's name, there was no effective treatment. Amid a lack of improvement in his symptoms, Kida and his family began suffering even more when they became targets of slander on Twitter.
Kida was familiar with social media, especially Facebook, as a tool to connect with friends in his hometown and overseas. It was on social media that he saw horrible words directed at him. Among the messages were, "He's insane, isn't he?" and, "If his relatives don't get him the right treatment, his paranoia will get worse," and, "A certain intractable disease, in a sense, that may not exist (lol)," and also, "An intractable disease called Munchausen's syndrome."
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210227/p2a/00m/0na/023000c
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