Doctors with M.E. stands ready to work with partners and organisations to bring medical education up-to-date and assist in developing the right services for ME/CFS patients. “The new guideline represents a positive and total paradigm change, uniting around the science, official disease classification and medico-legal compliance implications.” “This translation of scientific knowledge into clinical practice…Continue readingNICE 2021: A Triumph of Science over Discrimination
Categories
NICE 2021: A Triumph of Science over Discrimination
- Post date 1 November 2021
- Categories In 2021, Compliance, News, NICE 2021, Opinion, Policy Positions, Press Releases
- Tags Asad Khan, beliefs, Ben Marsh, Biomedical, biopsychosocial, Brian Hughes, Caroline Kingdon, CFS, Charles Shepherd, Children, clinical care, clinical features, clinical management, commercial opportunities, commercial opportunity, Compliance, compliance risk, Covid, CPD, critical illness insurance, data, David Strain, Diagnosis, disbelief, Discrimination, education, energy, Evidence, Evidence based, exercise, expert, experts, Families, fellows, fibro, Fibromyalgia, financial services, flu, Forward ME, GET, good news, GPs, GRADE, Guidelines, Harm, Harms, health care professionals, health insurance, History, indemnity, indemnity insurance, infection, insurance, K.N. Hng, Karl Morten, Keith Geraghty, Law, Legal, life insurance, Long Covid, ME, ME/CFS, MEA, medical belief, Medical Education, medical norm, Medically Unexplained Symptoms, medico-legal, MUS, Narrative, News, NHS, NICE 2021, Nigel Speight, Nina Muirhead, Paediatric, Paediatrician, Pandemic, Paradigm shift, PENE, PESE, Pharmaceutical, Pharmaceutical industry, Post Exertional Malaise, post-infectious, post-viral, Primary Care, Professional standard, Psychological, psychological therapies, Psychology, recognition, Referral, Research, Richard Ramyar, Risk, Safeguarding, science, scientific consensus, Severe ME, Shaun Peter Qureshi, social work, Standards, Stigma, Story, survey, symptoms, Tom Kindlon, Training, Trials, unlawfulness, William Weir, young people