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List of news articles on ME and CFS
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=== PACE trial === '''Hope For Chronic Fatigue Syndrome'''<ref>{{citation |last = Rehmeyer | first = Julie | date = November 13, 2015 | title = Hope For Chronic Fatigue Syndrome|url= http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2015/11/chronic_fatigue_pace_trial_is_flawed_should_be_reanalyzed.html|newspaper= Slate|location= New York|access-date= }}</ref> ''SLATE: Health and Science'' By: [[Julie Rehmeyer]]. (Nov 13, 2015) "The debate over this mysterious disease is suddenly shifting." '''Worse Than the Disease'''<ref>{{citation |last = Tuller | first = David | date = 27 October 2016 | title = Worse Than the Disease|url= http://undark.org/article/chronic-fatigue-graded-exercise-pace/|newspaper= Undark|location= Cambridge, MA|access-date= }}</ref> ''Undark'' By: [[David Tuller]]. (Oct 27, 2016) "After living in Oklahoma for 40 years, Nita and Doug Thatcher retired in 2009 to the Rust Belt city of Lorain, Ohio, a Cleveland suburb that hugs Lake Erie. When Nita needed to find a new primary care doctor, a friend recommended someone from the Cleveland Clinic. Nita knew the institution’s reputation for cutting-edge research and superior medical services. But as a longtime patient grappling with chronic fatigue syndrome, a debilitating disorder that scientists still don’t fully understand, she was wary when she learned that the clinic was promoting a common but potentially dangerous treatment for the illness: a steady increase in activity known as [[graded exercise therapy]]." '''New Science Mag: Misguided Therapy For Fatigue Syndrome 'Worse Than The Disease''''<ref>{{citation |last = Goldberg|first = Carey | date = 27 October 2016 | title = New Science Mag: Misguided Therapy For Fatigue Syndrome 'Worse Than The Disease'|url= http://www.wbur.org/commonhealth/2016/10/27/chronic-fatigue-misguided-therapy-undark|newspaper= WBUR|location= Boston|access-date= }}</ref> ''WBUR: Common Health'' By: Carey Goldberg. (Oct 27, 2016) "There's a new science magazine on the block: Undark, named for a century-old radium paint that seemed wondrous at first but later turned out to be deadly. Troubling indeed is the major story just out in Undark on what was once called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome — the preferred term now is myalgic encephalomyelitis, or ME. Reporter David Tuller has chronicled for years how flawed research led to faulty recommendations for patients that hurt rather than helped many of them." '''A Study of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Therapies Is Debunked (Again)'''<ref>{{citation |last = Tuller | first = David | date = 19 December 2016 | title = A Study of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Therapies Is Debunked (Again)|url= http://undark.org/2016/12/19/british-chronic-fatigue-syndrome-study-faces-yet-debunking/|newspaper= Undark|location= Cambridge, MA|access-date= }}</ref> ''Undark'' By: David Tuller. (Dec 19, 2016) "Two widely prescribed treatments for chronic fatigue syndrome — cognitive behavior therapy, and a steady increase in activity known as “graded exercise therapy” — provide no benefit to patients. That’s the stark conclusion of a new reanalysis of data from the so-called PACE trial, the largest study of treatments for the illness, also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis, or ME/CFS." '''Getting It Wrong on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome'''<ref>{{Cite news | last1 = Rehmeyer | first1 = Julie | last2 = Tuller | first2 = David | date = March 18, 2017 | title = Getting It Wrong on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome|url= https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/18/opinion/sunday/getting-it-wrong-on-chronic-fatigue-syndrome.html|newspaper= New York Times |access-date= }}</ref> ''New York Times'' By: Julie Rehmeyer and David Tuller (March 18, 2017) "What are some of the treatment regimens that sufferers of chronic fatigue syndrome should follow? Many major medical organizations cite two: psychotherapy and a steady increase in exercise. There’s just one problem. The main study that has been cited as proof that patients can recover with those treatments overstated some of its results. In reality, the claim that patients can recover from these treatments is not justified by the data."
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