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How Many People Have CFS?
Questions about the number of people affected by CFS have been
raised in response to a discrepancy between the prevalence figure printed in the
ads in Ladies’ Home Journal and Better Homes and Gardens and the
number the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been using in
its past communications, including its web-based information about CFS available
at www.cdc.gov/cfs.
Over the years, estimates of the prevalence of CFS have
increased as study design and methods have better reflected the complexity of
the illness itself. Research groups working independently at CDC and DePaul
University published studies in 2003 and 1999 (respectively) documenting that
between 450,000 and 900,000 American adults have CFS.
CDC researchers have just completed a new study of the
prevalence of CFS in metropolitan, urban and rural areas of Georgia using
improved screening methods and
more sensitive and
specific diagnostic criteria. This study has yielded a significantly higher
estimate of the number of people who have CFS, and it is currently being
submitted to a peer-reviewed journal for scientific validation and publication.
The print ads, public service
announcements and other materials created for the CFS public awareness campaign
utilize this new data, which was originally to be released at a press event
initially scheduled to coincide with the June 7 campaign launch. However,
recognizing that the new prevalence figures would be of heavy interest to the
media , policy makers, public health
officials, the scientific community, health care professionals and the CFS
community, CDC leaders determined that all parties would be best served by
postponing the press event announcing new prevalence data until soon after the
study is published in a scientific journal. This will allow the study methods to
be described and discussed fully, as well as the implications for the
significant increase in the estimate of the number of Americans affected by CFS.
Regrettably, when this strategic change was made, the ads in the monthly women’s
magazines were already at press with the new prevalence estimate included in the
copy.
The
Georgia study
represents the first in a new generation of epidemiology studies that address
shortcomings of earlier studies. We will report those details in the
CFIDSLink and the Chronicle when this new study is published. Stay
tuned!
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