youtuber: Have you been misled...? // What is PACE? // Medical Scandal

Esther12

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Just saw this had picked up 4k views in the first hour, so thought it was worth mentioning:



Looks like the creator is mainly a fashion vlogger, and she has a connective tissue disorder, pain, fatigue and hearing difficulties. This is her description of the vid:

My previous video on Chronic Fatigue: https://youtu.be/Z-jolEsm0ik
Jenny's fantastic blog post about her experiences: https://tipsforme.wordpress.com/2016/...

Current NICE guidelines: “1.6.2.4 Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and/or graded exercise therapy (GET) should be offered to people with mild or moderate CFS/ME and provided to those who choose these approaches, because currently these are the interventions for which there is the clearest research evidence of benefit.”

Further reading: The ME Association's medical adviser Dr Charles Shepherd, Hon. gives a critical commentary of the PACE trial: https://goo.gl/DAQSv2 Article in STAT, health and medicine journal: https://goo.gl/ohNNYL Action for ME's summary of the PACE trail Westminster debate: https://goo.gl/Rwzx3B If you've enjoyed this video then feel free to buy me a drink to show your support! https://ko-fi.com/A1814A5T

I've not watched it yet, but it's good to have word of the PACE scandal reaching different audiences and it looks like she was linking to decent stuff. Thanks to @Jenny TipsforME who seems to have prompted it.

This was also her in the Guardian: "People accept that I’m gay, but not that I’m disabled"

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeand...e-accept-that-im-gay-but-not-that-im-disabled
 
I couldn’t watch the whole thing (exhausted) but it came across as casual and approachable for people who are new to this issue, while still giving a fair picture of the controversy and how it feels to be a very sick person not being heard or taken seriously in the midst of it all.
 
Just saw this had picked up 4k views in the first hour, so thought it was worth mentioning:



Looks like the creator is mainly a fashion vlogger, and she has a connective tissue disorder, pain, fatigue and hearing difficulties. This is her description of the vid:



I've not watched it yet, but it's good to have word of the PACE scandal reaching different audiences and it looks like she was linking to decent stuff. Thanks to @Jenny TipsforME who seems to have prompted it.

This was also her in the Guardian: "People accept that I’m gay, but not that I’m disabled"

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeand...e-accept-that-im-gay-but-not-that-im-disabled


Ah! I still tell people about that article when discussing the stigma of chronic illness because I thought it was such an interesting read.

Good video!! She has over 200.000 subscribers, so definitely a good way to raise more awareness.
 
its nice that she shows not all people with chronic health problems are miserable and unapproachable , I would be a very bad advocate for us simply because I tend to be very angry swear often/way to often but this illness is way to hard to deal with without obnoxious people trying to control the narrative with their ridiculous philosophies based on their arrogant misperception of other peoples motivations . its the same kind of reasoning when you hear idiots talking about homeless beggars all being secretly rich and getting silly sums of money based on one beggar having one good day .
 
An articulate account by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard (who has almost ¼ million subscribers on youtube), of being diagnosed with ME, put into a psych hospital with suspected anorexia, and put through CBT and GET at the Bristol centre thanks to PACE.

The video focuses on a description and discussion of PACE including the various issues, the reanalysis, and the COI. It's about 20 minutes long.

 
Now nearly 30,000 views :thumbup:

Thanks to @Jenny TipsforME who seems to have prompted it.

I didn’t prompt it explicitly actually but I have contact with Jessica on the various social media, and I think it might have been prompted by my blog post in some way https://tipsforme.wordpress.com/2016/05/27/paralysis-and-pace/ which she links to (or any of my other grumblings about PACE). Though as someone who has a ME diagnosis I’m pretty sure I didn’t introduce her to these problems. She has issues with paralysis too, though hers seem to be nerve based (mine seem to be Atypical Periodic Paralysis).

I have a lot in common with Jessica and I first came across her on a vintage hair tutorial video. I’m into vintage fashion too, it’s a nice distraction from serious disability advocacy stuff. Her videos are on a range of topics, though these happen to all be relevant to my life (vintage style, chronic illness, disability advocacy, same sex marriage, dogs). Presumably most of her 250,000 YouTube followers aren’t in this very specific niche of overlapping interests so she’s in a good position to informally educate her viewers on different aspects of her experiences.

its nice that she shows not all people with chronic health problems are miserable and unapproachable

Yes she’s very cheerful generally which is much more engaging (though she’s not too proud to show a crash and associated low mood on video, so over time her viewers do get a sense of the fluctuations, it’s not all immaculate makeup and smiles).

An articulate account by Jessica Kellgren-Fozard (who has almost ¼ million subscribers on youtube), of being diagnosed with ME, put into a psych hospital with suspected anorexia, and put through CBT and GET at the Bristol centre thanks to PACE.

The video focuses on a description and discussion of PACE including the various issues, the reanalysis, and the COI. It's about 20 minutes long.
This is a good summary. She seems to have had a somewhat similar experience to Bob unfortunately. We really need to end this!

In my opinion it’s a direct consequence of the psychosocial approach: if ME is down to psychosocial factors such as false illness beliefs, then any sign of seeming very unwell is either psychiatric or a repercussion of psychiatric issues. It doesn’t cross medics’ minds that people with ME can look very thin because we have physical trouble turning food into energy, lacking the energy to digest in order to create more energy. Therefore we must have stopped eating.:mad:
 
Beyond her engaging personality, the other big draw for me was aesthetic, her sense of style: the colour of the carpet / her hair / lipstick / eyes in contrast with her pillow / sweater, really made her face 'pop' - I found myself more entranced by that visual than the verbiage.
 
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