Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Scientists claim: "Men tell twice as many lies as women"

But wait a second. The scientists who made this claim were men, so they were probably lying.

5 comments:

  1. *please respost* *please respost* *please respost*

    'So you know someone with M.E.?' is a paper for M.E. patients to give to
    friends and family members, to help them understand M.E. a bit better and
    know how to be a good friend to someone who has M.E.

    Two versions are available, the full-length 5 page version, or the 2 page
    summary which is reprinted below.

    The 2 page version is also available as a one page/one fold printable
    leaflet download, for easy redistribution. (See below for links.)

    -------

    So you know someone with M.E.?: Summary, by Jodi Bassett, September 2009

    www.hfme.org/soyouknowsomeonewithme.htm

    So you know someone with M.E. (perhaps a friend/family member) and want to
    know what to do and how to help? Good on you! Here are some suggestions:


    1. Offer acceptance, respect and emotional support.

    Many people with M.E. have a history of terrible treatment and abuse from
    friends and family, as well as the medical profession thanks to the planned
    'confusion' between M.E. and 'CFS.'

    M.E. is a serious neurological disease. Treat your friend or family member
    no differently than you would treat them if they had multiple sclerosis or
    any other serious disease. (M.E. is in fact very similar to MS, medically at
    least, if not politically.) Your support may make all the difference in the
    world.


    2. Learn the basic facts about M.E.

    Learn that:

    . M.E. is not fatigue or 'CFS' or 'CFIDS' or 'ME/CFS.'
    . M.E. is not medically unexplained or mysterious. See: What is M.E.?
    . M.E. is a serious neurological disease that is similar in many ways to MS
    and has more than 60 neurological, cardiac, metabolic, gastrointestinal,
    immunological and other symptoms. M.E. occurs in epidemic and sporadic forms
    and can be tested for using a series of objective tests (including MRI and
    SPECT brain scans).
    . People with M.E. are made much sicker by physical activity (or being
    upright or even thinking or taking in sensory input such as noise and light)
    beyond their individual limits. This includes even seemingly minor
    activities. Relapses can be severe and can last hours, days, weeks, months
    or even years, or they can be permanent. (Deaths can also occur with severe
    or repeated overexertion in M.E.)...............

    ReplyDelete
  2. .....cont.

    Be aware of the uselessness and unreliability of virtually all information
    on 'CFS,' 'CFIDS' and 'ME/CFS.' The mainstream media are not credible
    information sources, and nor are most 'CFS,' 'CFIDS' or 'ME/CFS' (or M.E.)
    so-called advocacy groups.

    It is also recommended that you learn how M.E. affects the person
    individually by asking them about their illness. The simple fact of your
    acceptance of this information shows your respect, and may mean a lot to
    your friend.


    3. Help the person with M.E. to rest, to avoid the sort of overexertion
    which can lead to disease progression.

    You can help by:
    . Being adaptable about communication modes (calls/visits/emails etc.).
    . Asking beforehand about the best time of day for calls/visits (no surprise
    visits too!)
    . Setting a time limit beforehand for calls or visits and being gracious
    when the person has to cancel a visit or a call (or end it prematurely/very
    suddenly).
    . Not pressuring someone to do something that they've said they can't do, or
    don't want to do, because of how much more ill it will make them.
    . When a person is very severely ill, the only contact they may be able to
    tolerate is for you to sit with them without talking, in their darkened
    room. Some patients would very much appreciate such a gesture, if you are a
    close friend.

    M.E. is a hellish disease, but the good news is that you really do have the
    power to make an enormous positive difference to the person you know with
    M.E. - just by being there for them and offering practical and/or emotional
    support but also by helping them avoid overexertion and so have their best
    possible prognosis.


    4. Encouraging your friend or family member to be more active when they have
    M.E. can harm them.

    Even trivial levels of activity over their individual post-illness limits
    can cause severe relapse or leave them wheelchair bound, or bedbound for
    many long years afterward, or permanently. Overexertion can also cause death
    in M.E. (often due to cardiac insufficiency).

    Increasing activity levels is something every person with M.E. will do the
    second they are able to, trust me! But arbitrarily increasing their activity
    levels above what they can cope with can only ever be counterproductive.
    It's a bit like telling someone with two broken legs to take up jogging,
    extremely painful, damaging and cruel - and of no possible benefit.


    5. Remember that you can't tell how someone with M.E. is doing just by
    looking.

    Try not to make superficial judgements of ability or severity! M.E. is not a
    stable illness. Observing the average M.E. sufferer for an hour - or even a
    week or more - will not give an accurate indication of their usual activity
    level because the severity of M.E. can wax and wane throughout the month,
    week, day and even hour. Also, people with M.E. can occasionally operate
    significantly above their actual illness level for short periods of time -
    albeit at the cost of severe and prolonged worsening of the illness
    afterward.

    ReplyDelete
  3. ..........cont.

    Just observing someone with M.E. do a certain task should not be taken to
    mean (a) that they can necessarily repeat the task anytime soon, (b) that
    they'd have been able to do it at any other time of day, (c) that they can
    do the same task (or seemingly similar tasks) every hour, day or even every
    week, or month, or (d ) that they could have done this same task without a
    very long rest period beforehand of days or weeks, or (e) that they wont be
    made very ill afterwards for a considerable period because they had to
    really push themselves (and make themselves ill) to do the task.

    Because the worsening of the illness caused by overexertion may not even
    begin until 48 or more hours afterwards (when most observers are long gone),
    it's impossible to tell by seeing an M.E. patient engaged in an activity,
    whether that activity is so far beyond the patient's limits that it will end
    up causing a severe or even permanent worsening of the illness (or
    'relapse').

    To be blunt, the activity may even end up killing the patient. Thus,
    observers who see a patient engaged in an activity have no idea what the
    consequences of this activity may be.


    6. Remember that telling your friend or family member to 'think themselves
    well' when they have M.E. is not helpful, kind or reasonable.

    There is no more possibility that M.E. could be improved by positive
    thinking/willpower any more than with MS or Parkinson's disease. If there
    were, we would ALREADY no longer be ill. Nobody wants to get better more
    desperately than M.E. patients do! Nobody.


    7. Please don't recommend treatments you may have read about online, or in
    the paper, or from friends.

    The vast majority, very close to 100% of media articles about M.E. are in
    fact talking about various diseases misdiagnosed as 'CFS' - people with all
    sorts of very different and often much milder/transient diseases.

    That isn't to say that there aren't treatments that can help with some
    symptoms. There are and they can make a significant difference to a
    patient's life. However, the person you know with M.E. will know far more
    than you do about where to find legitimate information and which sources to
    avoid.

    ReplyDelete
  4. ....cont.

    f something really worked or there were anything like a cure, the M.E.
    world is very well connected and VERY EXTREMELY motivated to get better, and
    we would all KNOW very very quickly.


    8. Some M.E. patients may appreciate some practical help.

    You might like to ask the person you know with M.E. if they are in this
    situation, you may then offer to:
    . Do some shopping for them on a regular basis
    . Help with meals or other household tasks
    . Drive them to medical appointments and/or book their medical appointments
    . Research something for them online e.g. disability services.
    . Do anything they need doing that you are easily able to do.
    . Read the papers on HFME relevant to carers


    9. Be a good friend and let your friend continue to be a friend to you.

    Remember that your friend is still in there and still has all the usual
    hopes, dreams and desires. Cut them some slack if sometimes they're in a bad
    mood, or feeling sad or angry.

    We understand that even though we are dealing with a lot, your problems are
    still important too. It isn't a competition, and less awful problems than
    M.E. don't suddenly become easier to deal with just because someone you know
    has M.E.

    Remember that sounding happy is not the same as sounding healthy. Feel free
    to comment on how happy someone sounds but don't assume that this means that
    they're feeling better than usual.

    Remember that although your friend may seem happy and seem to be coping -
    and even if they are - they're still living every day under extreme stress,
    with extreme pain and suffering with no end in sight. That takes a lot out
    of you and is very draining and taxing and difficult. Most of us try to find
    all the joy and happiness in small things as much as we can, to be able to
    keep ourselves going. Many of us hide our suffering very well, particularly
    after many years of being very ill, but that doesn't mean it isn't there.

    ReplyDelete
  5. ....cont.

    10. Help get other friends/family members informed and on-side.

    Explain to them calmly but firmly why M.E. isn't 'CFS' and why all the
    information they have read about 'CFS' doesn't apply to M.E. Perhaps give
    out some HFME leaflets. This information may be received better coming from
    you rather than a patient.


    11. Help get the wider community informed and on-side.

    If you really want to get involved, you could distribute leaflets to your
    street or your friends and co-workers or doctors in your area, or join the
    HFME, or make a donation, and so on.


    12. Just do your honest best.

    Your friend with M.E. won't be expecting you to always do everything
    perfectly, we understand that nobody is perfect but appreciate your taking
    the time to try to at least avoid some of the biggest potential problems. By
    reading this paper, you are already demonstrating that you care - so thank
    you.

    ------------

    This page is available here: www.hfme.org/soyouknowsomeonewithme.htm

    If you would like to link to this page, please do so using the link above
    only. If you'd like to download a Word or PDF version of this text, please
    click on the above link.

    A one-page summary of the facts of M.E., Hummingbirds, The misdiagnosis of
    CFS and So you know someone with M.E.? are all now available in a printable
    leaflet format.

    So you know someone with M.E.? leaflet links:
    www.hfme.org/Word/So_You_Know_Someone_With_ME_LEAFLET.doc
    www.hfme.org/PDF/So_You_Know_Someone_With_ME_LEAFLET.pdf

    To download all other leaflets please see:
    www.hfme.org/documentdownloads.htm

    Best wishes everyone,
    Jodi Bassett
    --
    The Hummingbirds' Foundation
    for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis:
    www.hfme.org
    --

    ReplyDelete