2004
CFS, FM,
& such 'In the Media, In the News'
TV,
Radio, Newpapers, etc.
(Links
updated 2/07)
Selected articles
from 2004
- For more current news items relating to CFS and FMS,
please see: Google
News, Yahoo
News, Immunesupport,
and Co-Cure
Archives.
- Oscar
watch: Underdog 'Seabiscuit' wins the feel-good award
Seattle Times, WA - Feb
6, 2004
Laura Hillenbrand, author of the brilliantly detailed biography
"Seabiscuit" on which the movie was based, spent years researching and
writing her book, often while confined to her bed with chronic fatigue
syndrome. And Ross, who hadn't directed since the box-office
disappointment of "Pleasantville" in 1998, read an early version of the
book and envisioned a movie, sweet and nostalgic, steeped in the warm
browns and russets of an autumn afternoon.
- A
name for the pain: Fibromyalgia sufferers are no longer alone
WTOP
News, Washington, DC - Feb 17,
2004
Plagued by such extreme pain and fatigue that she couldn't leave her
bed, Lynne Matallana thought she had lost her mind. What she did lose
was 2 1/2 years of her life. That's how much time passed before doctors
finally diagnosed her with fibromyalgia, a chronic illness in which the
body's pain response goes haywire.
- The
Flash is Back: Alternative Nutrition Helps Actress Jennifer Beals Beat
CFS
Better Nutrition
- March 2004
The health challenge was a turning point in Beals' attitude toward
nutrition. She still avoids sugar, wheat and caffeine, three of the
culprits responsible for her ailments. She has substituted these things
with healthier options such as oats, fruits and green teas. Beals no
longer eats as stringently as Dr. Matsen recommended because her
digestive system began working so well that her metabolism skyrocketed,
and she was losing weight too quickly.
- No,
You're The Jerk: Doc-Patient Summit Probes Sources of Mutual Disdain
Washington Post, DC - Mar
8, 2004
100 doctor-patient teams vented their complaints about each other
during a three-day summit in Phoenix. They channeled those frustrations
into a report filled with tips they hope will help heal wounded
doctor-patient relationships nationwide. The 44-page report, available
at www.patient-physician.com,
features seven areas where doctor and patient agree there's lot of room
for improvement -- communication, the office experience, the hospital
experience, education, integration, decision-making and outcomes. One
of the surprises of the sometimes-heated summit was that patients and
doctors, for all their differences, said they want essentially the same
thing: mutual respect, more listening and cooperation, and better
health outcomes for the patient. In the 1970s, said [Marie Savard],
studies began to show that patients with chronic conditions who are
active in their own care have much better health outcomes. And yet, she
said, doctors and patients are still stuck in what she called "Marcus
Welby mode" -- with the omniscient, paternalistic doctor ministering to
the passive, nodding patient. The summit's sponsors and participants
hope their report will change that, offering both doctors and patients
hints on how to interact in a more mutually satisfying way.
... John J. Seddon Jr. can vouch for the tips in the report. He said
that participating in the summit as a patient has transformed the way
he views his health care and the way he comports himself at the
doctor's office. The 70-year-old retired Air Force intelligence officer
said he now takes more responsibility for his own health... And when he
encounters rudeness or apathy at the doctor's office, he no longer
shrinks away quietly, assuming doctor knows best.
- Sick
and shunned: When everyday smells are an enemy, society should be an
ally
Albuquerque
Tribune, NM - Mar 9,
2004
Environmental illnesses have come to the forefront of disability issues
during the last 10 years. What was once thought to be a disease of the
mind is now recognized as the body rejecting the enormous amounts of
chemicals that invade our lives on a daily basis.
- Stress,
Breast Cancer and Cytokines
NPR Weekend
Edition, DC - Mar 20, 2004
New research indicates that women with breast cancer survive longer if
they are able to eliminate certain stress factors in their lives. The
study suggests that in about 30 percent of breast-cancer survivors, the
body's own immune system chemicals -- notably cytokines -- prolong
fatigue. Frank Browning reports.
- Understanding
Omega-3s
Washington
Post, DC - March
24, 2004
I first became interested in the power of omega-3 fatty acids when
psychiatrists I work with began prescribing them for their depressed
patients. Then I started hearing about their benefits for arthritis and
a host of other diseases. And I couldn't help but wonder, could it be
possible that one simple change in the diet could provide so many
benefits?
- Fibromyaliga
Boosts Pain To Acute Levels
NBC5i.com, TX - Mar 25,
2004
Shari Ferbert outwardly appears healthy. One the inside, however, she
is wracked with pain. Febert . . . suffers from a disease that is
difficult to diagnose and has no known cause. Fibromyaliga causes
profound pain, even from the slightest touch, in people afflicted by
the condition. Doctors often fail to identify the disease because it
resembles other problems. The misdiagnoses, Febert said, is almost as
painful as the disorder.
- Vitamin
D found to boost health, if people get enough
American Medical News - Apr 5, 2004
Research is pointing to vitamin D as a possible cancer preventive, a
boon to heart health and a potential player in preventing a host of
autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes, multiple sclerosis and
arthritis. Deficiencies also were recently pegged as a possible culprit
among people with persistent and nonspecific bone and muscle pain and
the reason that more elderly women experience falls.
> American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
March, 2004;79(3):362-371
- Fibromyalgia:
The Answer Is Blowin' in the Wind
J Rheumatol. 2004
Apr;31(4):636-9
Why do those who
belittle the concept of FM offer virtually nothing more of an argument
than their own feeble versions of "common sense," while repeatedly
ignoring a huge and ever-growing body of evidence supporting its
legitimacy?
- A
Battle Against Unknowns: Struggling to Combat CFS and Fibromyalgia
Rapid City
Journal, SD - May 5, 2004
Just getting out of bed each morning is sometimes more than two Rapid
City women can handle. Both suffer from diseases many doctors won't
admit exist and, instead, tell the women, "It's all in your head." Pat
Usera and Connie Pich suffer from fibromyalgia syndrome and Pich has
chronic fatigue syndrome as well.
- Spin
Control
Washington
Post, DC - May
10, 2004
Dizziness Afflicts Nearly Everyone Now and Then. That Doesn't Make It
Easy to Live With. By Mimi Harrison.
On the morning of Thursday, Dec. 18, 2003, I woke up dizzy. Even before
I opened my eyes, I sensed that something was wrong. I was lying in bed
on my back, but I felt like Dorothy, airborne, whirling toward Oz. I
opened my eyes and the feeling went on. Gingerly, I raised myself out
of bed.
- Vitamin
D Deficiency Called Major Health Risk
Washington
Post, DC - May
21, 2004
Many Americans, particularly African Americans, may be suffering from
unrecognized deficiencies of a key nutrient -- vitamin D -- that
increase the risk of bone problems and perhaps a host of other
diseases, a growing number of scientists say. . . . But beyond bone and
muscle problems, some evidence suggests a dearth of vitamin D may be
associated with an array of more serious illnesses, including many
forms of cancer, high blood pressure, depression, and immune-system
disorders such as multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes.
- The
High Price of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
UPI, DC -
June 22, 2004
CFS costs the United States more than $9 billion each year in lost
productivity, or about $20,000 per person annually, not even including
healthcare costs, according to a study published Monday in the online
journal Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation. About a quarter of
those with chronic fatigue syndrome, or CFS, aren't able to work at
all, and those who do continue to work lose about one-third of their
income, the report said. (Our
group members Elly and Cheri are quoted in this article!)
> Cost
Effectiveness and Resource Allocation 2004, 2:4
- Living With A
Disability
NZ
Girl - June 28, 2004
It's
hard enough being a teenager without having to deal with a debilitating
disability like Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS).
- Fighting
through the fatigue, pain
Arizona
Republic, AZ - Jul
12, 2004
Frandsen began searching for answers when she experienced bodywide
aching and had to take two, sometimes three, naps a day. "I was so weak
I couldn't even bring the groceries in from the car or lift a roast
from the oven without my husband's help," she says. A low-carb diet was
her first step to recovery. Then she discovered the
guaifenesin/salicylate-free treatment protocol developed by St. Amand.
It restored her energy and reduced her aches "90 percent," she says.
- Photographer's
putting faces on the suffering
San Diego Union
Tribune, CA - Aug 2, 2004
Like many of her partners in pain, Carol Sveilich goes through much of
life disguised as a paragon of health. Only when you look behind the
mask, behind the functional facade, can you appreciate the suffering.
- Illness
inspires woman to reach out
Marion Chronicle
Tribune, IN - Aug
2, 2004
Now Jacque Ormsby is trying to start a support group for local people
with fibromyalgia and its close cousin, chronic fatigue syndrome.
- Supporting
Caregiving Spouses
Washington Post, DC
- Aug 10, 2004
Two and a half years ago, when they were both about 60, George and Jane
Patrick of Bethesda started drawing up plans for retirement, even
though it was still five years off. What their vision didn't include:
her diagnosis soon after with multiple sclerosis, which requires her to
use a cane and keeps her home some days because of pain and fatigue. It
also didn't include the depression and irritability that he began to
experience as her caretaker, said Patrick ....
- Lyme
disease spurs woman to educate others Petoskey
News, Michigan - Aug
16, 2004
- Gulf
War Syndrome May Be in the Genes Reuters, UK -
Aug 17, 2004
- Chronic
fatigue syndrome researchers offer physical evidence Medical
News Today, UK - Aug
23, 2004
- Study
links nutritional supplement, creatine, to increased ... Medical News
Today, UK - Aug
23, 2004
- U
Of M Starting Massive Chronic Pain Research Effort WDIV, MI -
Aug 24, 2004
- Research
Effort Seeks Answers to Painful Questions Newswise (press
release) - Aug
25, 2004
- New
clues to chronic fatigue Toronto
Star, Canada - Aug
26, 2004
- Skin
Offers Clues to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome WebMD -
Aug
26, 2004
- Health
Tips ... from UPI Washington
Times, DC - Aug
27, 2004
- Fibromyalgia
Story Inspires Hope KRON4, CA -
Aug 27, 2004
- Chronic
Fatigue Differs from Depression Reuters, NY -
Aug
31, 2004
- A
dead horse rescued me Telegraph.co.uk, UK -
Sep 3, 2004
- Believers
cling to sting therapy Tribune Review,
Pittsburgh - Sep 13,
2004
- Pictures
tell of photographer's battle with the 'silent' illness Western Mail, UK-
Sep 16, 2004
- Living
with illness and stigma Hendon Times, UK
- Sept 16, 2004
- Chemicals
Sickened '91 Gulf War Veterans, Latest Study Finds NY
Times - Oct 15, 2004
- Conquering
immune disorders News
8
Austin, TX - Nov
2, 2004
- Treatment
for chronic fatigue syndrome News
14 Carolina, NC - Nov
9,
2004
- VA
shifting research away from stress as cause of illness San Jose Mercury News, CA -
Nov 12, 2004
- Gulf
War illness studies to shift away from stress Detroit Free Press, MI -
Nov 13, 2004
- Chemical
quagmire - Dover woman says controversial disease has taken hold of her
life Portsmouth
Herald
News, NH - Nov
14, 2004
- Chemical
sensitivity has altered her life Portsmouth
Herald News, NH - Nov
14,
2004
- MCS
Resources Portsmouth
Herald News, NH - Nov
14,
2004
- Fibromyalgia
Syndrome Journal
of
American Medical Association, IL - Nov
16, 2004
- Gulf
War Syndrome Acknowledgment Urged [of British Gov't] Ross, AP - Nov
17,
2004
- Dr.
Tom: Mysterious Ailment Drains Energy Iowa Channel.com, IA -
Nov 18, 2004
- Report: Gulf War
syndrome is real Newsweek, NY -
Nov 18, 2004
- Rare
Seabiscuit Photos For Sale on eBay BloodHorse - Nov
18, 2004
- Some
Childhood Ills Refuse to Go Away HealthDay News - Nov
21, 2004
- Dr.
Mona: Fibromyalgia and Fatigue CBS
11, TX - Nov
24, 2004
- New
Study Links Stress and Aging Washington
Post, DC - Nov
29, 2004
- Jade's
insight lives on through poetry
ic
Coventry, UK -
Nov 30, 2004
- Beautifying
the outsiders New
Zealand
Herald, New Zealand - Nov
30, 2004
- Stress
'may speed up cell ageing' BBC
News, UK - Nov
30, 2004
- A
life filled by loves helps Geraldine Shader handle illness Albany Times Union, NY -
Dec 10, 2004
- Worker
sues Boeing, Aetna over disability benefits OregonLive.com, OR -
Dec 14, 2004
- Chronic
fatigue syndrome affects more than a million people Yuma Sun, AZ -
Dec 16, 2004
- Fibromyalgia
sufferer ready to help others Carlisle
Sentinel, PA - Dec
16, 2004
- Therapy
Targets Cause of Chronic Fatigue LA Times, Los Angeles
- Dec
20, 2004
- Holiday
cheer is a challenge for chronically ill New York Newsday, NY -
Dec 21, 2004
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