I think that for the poll to have any validity, we can't just announce it on the forum, let people self-select and hope for the best - we need to know exactly how many people are in the sample and our sample needs to be unbiased (i.e. unaffected by interest in the topic of thyroid issues). If we just announce it, we have no idea how many people will have seen it or to what extent people are self-selecting.
I think the best approach would be to decide what sample size we want, list who has been active on the forums in the past week (preferably people who have been members for at least 6 months so that we can have some confidence that they visit fairly regularly, and take a random sample of the size we want and PM them to invite them to take the poll so that they know it's going on and know it's important.
Exactly what I thought Sasha. So, I have discovered this morning that almost exactly 100 people post regularly. I have excluded two people who probably posted just recently in response to my inventing 'ME4' in this thread (both would be yes, but the idea is to get the right answer, not the one we want).
My question would be a very simple one because this is intended just as a raw look see and if a look see gets complicated it bellyflops. I think it is:
'Are you aware that you have a diagnosis of CFS/ME and have had blood tests that either show thyroid autoantibodies or an under- or over- active thyroid based on T3, T4 or TSH levels?'
On this basis I already know of 4 yes answers. I am fairly sure there are more, although I have no idea how many. Up to 10 would be fairly unremarkable. 10-20 would suggest there may be something to it. More than 20 would be pretty impressive.
The question then would be how to get answers from the 100 posters without causing any offence or concern. I have the list of names - which is hardly confidential since it is just the people who have posted recently. I could post that on this thread or a new one. How people wanted to answer could be optional. I can of course take answers as 'Conversations'. I have not thought through all the issues but I have a feeling it is probably about as simple as that. If a lot of people simply don't think they have ever been tested for either then it would be useful to know that if yes responses are unremarkable. To begin with it might just be interesting to know how many people would answer yes.