Some info from Margaret Williams which shows Prof Cathie Sudlow worked with MS in the past, I guess we don't know for sure what her views are though on ME now but.......
"AfME has announced that Professor Cathie Sudlow, now the holder of a personal chair in neurology at Edinburgh, is a conference speaker at the 2018 CFS ME Research Collaborative.
It may be recalled that when he held a personal chair in psychology at Edinburgh, in his Inaugural Lecture on 12th May 2005 entitled “The Science of the Art of Medicine”, Sharpe’s topics (taken directly from his own notes) included indicators of his intransigent beliefs about ME/CFS, for example:
“It is apparent that the attitude of patients suffering from this chronic state must be changed…”
“The knowledge that experience has shown that certain sensations have resulted from certain activities must be replaced by a conviction that these efforts may be made without harm”.
When in Edinburgh, Professor Sharpe was working on the Scottish Neurological Symptoms Study and his collaborators included (then Dr) Cathie Sudlow. This was a large scale study from which Sharpe leaked a computer file containing a confidential list of over 70 patients’ names and addresses which he sent to a member of the public, who unknowingly forwarded the information to other people.
Most of the named patients, some of whom live in sheltered accommodation, can be (and have been) identified.
Some of the confidential information consisted of personal statements made by patients (whose names and addresses were included) to a number of high-profile Professors and Consultants involved in the Scottish Neurological Symptoms Study, including Dr Cathie Sudlow.
Examples of the leaked confidential information about the study participants include the following comments:
“putting it on”; “mad”; “imagining symptoms”; “examination was a waste of time”;
The study from which the confidential data was leaked was looking at the prevalence of medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) in new patients attending Scottish Neurology clinics, particularly at “illness-related beliefs and behaviours”, which included patients with ME/CFS.
This serious breach of confidentiality by Professor Sharpe was reported by Ian Johnston in The Scotsman on 19th August 2005. The University of Edinburgh promised to launch an investigation; a spokeswoman said at the time that Professor Sharpe had been made aware of the situation but was on holiday. It seems that he was not censured in any way."