A really good feature on ME from the commercial channel TV2 today.
It contains an interview with ME patient Marianne who describes life with ME very well and how problematic it was for her being diagnosed so late and receiving wrong advice.
Also an interview with ME researcher Olav Mella. I think the interview was made during a recent lecture on ME he held for the Health And Care Services Committee at the Parliament.
The article contains text and short interview videos.
In the video with Olav Mella he says:
I believe a lot of the reason lies in not knowing the cause of the disease. Some of the patients look healthy, but feel dreadful - and we have no blood tests for the diagnosis, no clinical diagnosis. The knowledge about the disease among health care personell has been far too low.
- Do we see an improvement of knowledge in the health care system?
It absolutely seems so, but unfortunately one also sees at the training institutions that the teaching in what this disease is varies a lot and is much based on the single lecturer's impression of the disease.
- And this effects how the doctors follow up their patients?
It seems so, yes.
- Do you have any thoughts on how this can be improved?
The view on the disease must change through knowledge. There is an increasing knowledge base internationally, and this must be spread to the medical faculties and to those who have finished their educations. The knowledge base there is insufficient.
- Is there something that can be done on a political level to achieve this?
Yes. What I think is lacking today, is that there's no defined group of doctors, a speciality, with responsibility for this patient group. If someone got a concrete responsibility, and not random specialities or random doctors handling the patient group I believe quicker progress can be made.
TV2:
Kampen om ME-diagnosen
Not able to google translate the article, sorry.