Andrew
Senior Member
- Messages
- 2,523
- Location
- Los Angeles, USA
If I had it to do all over again, I would not have told any subsequent doctors about my CFS diagnosis. It is the kiss of death. But at the time I assumed the stigma against it had changed. I thought that until I started reading the CDC website and noticed they were selectively ignoring research outcomes and posting their personal hunches as if they were science-based.
I testified to the CFSAC about this. Nobody checked to see if what I said was true. Years later the CFSAC actually did review the website (at the urging of one of their members) and concluded that the CDC was cherry-picking studies and presenting bias as fact. IOW, they drew the same basic conclusion I did. And I was not the only patient who had been complaining about CDC coverage.
In all fairness, many CFSAC members have tried to move the CDC. And they did respond by finally doing the review. And I don't mean to seem ungrateful but what good does that do me? I still go to the doctor and get treated dismissively. You see, the CDC will make no effort to undo the harm they have caused by refuting the misunderstanding they helped to create. They are only willing to cause less harm.
So there is no reason for doctors or anyone else who was influenced by them to think what they presented in the past was wrong. Not to mention all the other institutional websites that parroted the CDC are still there. And honestly, I look the possibility of congress cutting funding to CDC for ME/CFS and I'm not scared. I'm glad. The result will be less harm to patients. You think they have changed? That's what people thought after the CDC got busted by Congress and Reeves was put in charge. Remember Reeves?
Remember the information about how all we need is exercise and CBT. Remember that crap? You think Unger is different? She is not. She defended all that crap. She said it was simply a reflection of CDC research, and there was no cherry picking. I'd like her to produce the CDC study on exercise, and the CDC study on CBT, because I sure have not been able to find them.
I testified to the CFSAC about this. Nobody checked to see if what I said was true. Years later the CFSAC actually did review the website (at the urging of one of their members) and concluded that the CDC was cherry-picking studies and presenting bias as fact. IOW, they drew the same basic conclusion I did. And I was not the only patient who had been complaining about CDC coverage.
In all fairness, many CFSAC members have tried to move the CDC. And they did respond by finally doing the review. And I don't mean to seem ungrateful but what good does that do me? I still go to the doctor and get treated dismissively. You see, the CDC will make no effort to undo the harm they have caused by refuting the misunderstanding they helped to create. They are only willing to cause less harm.
So there is no reason for doctors or anyone else who was influenced by them to think what they presented in the past was wrong. Not to mention all the other institutional websites that parroted the CDC are still there. And honestly, I look the possibility of congress cutting funding to CDC for ME/CFS and I'm not scared. I'm glad. The result will be less harm to patients. You think they have changed? That's what people thought after the CDC got busted by Congress and Reeves was put in charge. Remember Reeves?
Remember the information about how all we need is exercise and CBT. Remember that crap? You think Unger is different? She is not. She defended all that crap. She said it was simply a reflection of CDC research, and there was no cherry picking. I'd like her to produce the CDC study on exercise, and the CDC study on CBT, because I sure have not been able to find them.
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