NIH: Accelerating Research on ME/CFS meeting, 4th and 5th April 2019

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This must have been posted elsewhere, but I didn't see it. The NIH (USA gov't agency which directs most health research in the country) has two days of presentations on the topic, Thursday (tomorrow) and Friday 4/4 and 4/5, to be available via streaming video cast. I'm not aware of any audience participation.

Here's the agenda:
https://custom.cvent.com/536726184E...35e11fdf/572de4fe15dd4c08a515a089094bc343.pdf

Here's the placemark for the videocast, which is scheduled to begin Thurs 4/4, 9am Eastern Daylight Time, which is ummm GMT-4.
https://videocast.nih.gov/summary.asp?live=31636&bhcp=1
 
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Looks like it's getting ready to start.
Edit - not a good start. Watched the first few minutes, auditorium looks nearly empty. Then screen went blank, no sound, access denied.
 
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Watching on Chrome. Mostly OK but stops quite .often, so I'm missing bits.
Dr Bateman was good on clinical experience, case studies and discussing the history and purposes of the different definitions.

Naviaux now.
 
I find it very confusing and not very convincing so far.
I don't agree with some of what he says and some of it is irrelevant.
He makes some good points but some have alternate just as plausible explanations.
In the end i think his work on metabolomics will be more useful then the philosophical implications of medical research or theories about how things work
 
I think I've heard or read most of what Dr Naviaux said from him before, but I found it interesting. I don't know enough to know whether his theories are likely to be useful.

Half hour break now.

The auditorium still looks only about a quarter full or less which is disappointing.
 
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