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Opinion: The medical community is changing its mind on chronic fatigue syndrome. Why aren’t insurers?

It's time to stop denying disability benefits for people with chronic fatigue syndrome.
NIH Director Francis Collins and Brian Vastag in 2017. The NIH launched a study seeking answers on chronic fatigue syndrome after Vastag wrote an open letter to Collins in 2015.

Brian Vastag was enjoying a life that many people would envy. At age 41, he had achieved professional success as an award-winning health and science reporter for the Washington Post, covering important stories from around the world. That came to an end in July 2012, when he found himself afflicted by a mysterious and poorly understood illness that ended up sweeping away almost every vestige of his vigorous and productive life. To add insult to injury, he also had to endure a four-year battle with his insurance company to cover his disability claim for the condition he eventually learned was chronic fatigue syndrome.

Like many Americans who experience serious health setbacks, Vastag thought he could rely for help on the disability, often abbreviated as ME/CFS), many of the 1 million or more Americans who have it are ridiculed and dismissed as delusional, hysterical, or suffering from some psychiatric disorder.

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