The formation of the brain can cure chronic fatigue


The formation of the brain can cure chronic fatigue

Exercise and behavioral therapies are effective and cost-effective ways for chronic fatigue syndrome, also known as I, an analysis shows to be treated.

A study of 640 patients showed that treatment has the potential to save the economy millions of pounds if widely adopted.

The results were published in the journal PLoS ONE. However, it has a different treatment for the patient groups favors shown to offer little value. Nobody knows what causes the disease, but a quarter of a million people in the UK are thought to have.

Symptoms include fatigue, poor concentration and memory, and muscle and joint pain and insomnia.

An earlier version of this research published last year showed that cognitive behavioral therapy (changing the thinking about your symptoms) and graded exercise therapy (gradually increasing the amount of exercise) were the most effective treatments.

However, the study raised the ire of many patients (learning to live within limits) groups, the stimulation therapy, were very much better and safer for the patient.

Using data from the same group of patients, researchers improved fatigue levels and activity costs for the provision of NHS treatments.

It was found that only cognitive-behavioral therapy and graded exercise therapy as a cost-effective.

When the cost of the broader society was seen as lost work or the cost of supervisors, provided that these two treatments in total savings.

Professor Paul McCrone, a health economist at Kings College London, said: "Now there is a strong argument for the NHS to invest in providing these treatments."

Professor Michael Sharpe, University of Oxford, said: "These new findings should encourage the commissioners of health, these treatments for patients who need them."

Sir Peter Spencer, chief executive of the charity event for me, said, "patient choice can not be reduced as a result of this exercise in calculation.