People suffering from ME are not receiving
adequate treatment because many doctors and researchers are failing to take the
condition seriously, the government’s health advisory body has said.
In an
official report, the Gezondheidsraad said the chronic condition was too often
downgraded to ‘fatigue’ or a problem ‘between the ears’, while patients tended
to be dismissed as attention seekers, NOS reported.
Between 30,000 and 40,000
people in the Netherlands are estimated to suffer from ME or chronic fatigue
syndrome. Some of them spend days in bed recovering. Patient Lisa Klaasen told
NOS: ‘Compare it with a heavy flu. You’re ill and in pain and your whole body
is constantly crying out with tiredness.’
Yvonne van der Ploeg, a member of the
executive board of the ME/CFS association, said research into the condition had
stood still for 40 years. ‘Now at last we can start to make inroads,’ she said.
The Gezondheidsraad said diagnosis of the condition was hampered by doctors’
preconceptions and tendency to regard it as a psychological issue. Patients
with ME are often required to undergo behavioural or occupational therapy to
qualify for benefits and health insurance, even though these treatments are
often ineffective.

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