Medical School Education on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis.
Muirhead, Nina, Muirhead, John, Lavery, Grace et al. · Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) · 2021 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study looked at how much medical schools in the UK teach doctors-in-training about ME/CFS. Researchers sent questionnaires to all 34 UK medical schools and found that only about half actually teach ME/CFS, and the teaching varies widely between schools. Most schools said they would welcome better teaching materials and resources about ME/CFS, suggesting doctors need more education on how to recognize and diagnose this condition.
Why It Matters
This study documents critical deficiencies in medical education about ME/CFS across the UK, which directly contributes to patient misdiagnosis and delayed recognition. Since doctors are the gatekeepers to diagnosis and treatment, inadequate training perpetuates the historical underrecognition of ME/CFS and may reinforce outdated misconceptions about the disease. The findings provide evidence supporting calls for curriculum reform and regulatory intervention to improve future physician competency.
Observed Findings
Only 13 of 22 responding schools (59%) reported teaching ME/CFS at all.
Teaching was led by lecturers from ten different medical specialties, indicating lack of standardized approach.
Only 7 schools included ME/CFS questions in examinations, and only 3 reported likely clinical exposure for students.
No school provided curriculum syllabi details to researchers.
15 of 22 schools (approximately two-thirds) expressed interest in receiving further teaching aids on ME/CFS.
Inferred Conclusions
Medical school education on ME/CFS in the UK is inadequate and fragmented, with significant gaps in standardization, assessment, and clinical exposure.
The medical education establishment requires regulatory intervention from the GMC and Medical Schools Council to mandate curriculum updates on ME/CFS.
There is substantial receptiveness among medical schools to improve ME/CFS education if appropriate resources and guidance are provided.
The current educational approach fails to align with modern biomedical research establishing ME/CFS as a multisystem disease rather than a psychogenic condition.
Remaining Questions
What specific content are the 59% of schools currently teaching about ME/CFS, and does it reflect current biomedical evidence?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that poor medical education directly causes patient harm, nor does it establish causation between educational gaps and patient outcomes. The survey captures only self-reported teaching and interest; it does not measure actual student learning, competency, or clinical practice outcomes. The findings are limited to UK medical schools and may not generalize to other healthcare systems.