School Functioning in Adolescents With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
Knight, Sarah Jenette, Politis, Jennifer, Garnham, Christine et al. · Frontiers in pediatrics · 2018 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study looked at how ME/CFS affects teenagers' school lives by comparing 39 adolescents with ME/CFS to 28 healthy peers. Researchers found that teens with ME/CFS missed more school, felt less connected to school, participated less in school activities, and had lower academic performance. The severity of fatigue and emotional symptoms were linked to these school difficulties.
Why It Matters
Most discussions of ME/CFS and school focus only on absenteeism, but this study reveals that the impact on adolescents' schooling is far broader—including feeling disconnected from school and academic underperformance. Understanding these multiple dimensions of school dysfunction is essential for developing comprehensive support strategies and educational accommodations for affected teenagers.
Observed Findings
Adolescents with CFS had significantly higher rates of school absence compared to healthy peers.
Students with CFS reported poorer school-related quality of life.
Participation in school activities was reduced in the CFS group.
School connectedness (sense of belonging) was lower in adolescents with CFS.
Academic performance was reduced in the CFS group.
Fatigue severity was significantly associated with most measures of poor school functioning.
Inferred Conclusions
School dysfunction in adolescents with CFS extends beyond absenteeism to encompass multiple domains including academic performance, social connectedness, and quality of life.
Fatigue severity and emotional symptoms are important factors associated with poor school functioning and may be intervention targets.
Adolescents with CFS require comprehensive, multifaceted school support addressing participation, belonging, and academic performance—not just attendance management.
Remaining Questions
Which interventions (e.g., tailored accommodations, mental health support, graded return-to-school programs) most effectively improve school functioning in adolescents with ME/CFS?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study cannot establish whether fatigue and emotional symptoms directly cause poor school functioning or vice versa. The cross-sectional design captures a single point in time and cannot determine whether these school difficulties persist, improve, or worsen over time. The study also cannot identify which specific interventions would improve school outcomes.
Do these school functioning deficits persist into adulthood, and what are the long-term educational and employment consequences?
What is the temporal relationship between illness progression and changes in school functioning—do interventions that reduce fatigue improve school outcomes?
How do individual factors (e.g., age, disease duration, access to support) modify the relationship between ME/CFS and school outcomes?