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Prevalence of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in metropolitan, urban, and rural Georgia

by William C Reeves, et al.
June 9, 2007

Journal: Population Health Metrics 2007, 5:5 [Published online June 8 2007]

Authors and affiliations: Reeves WC, Jones JF, Maloney E, Heim C, Hoaglin DC, Boneva RS, Morrissey M, Devlin R. Chronic Viral Diseases Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia (Reeves, Jones, Maloney, Boneva); Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta (Heim); Abt Associates Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Chicago, Illinois (Hoaglin, Morrissey, Devlin), USA. [E-mail: wcr1@cdc.gov ]

DOI:10.1186/1478-7954-5-5

Background: Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a debilitating illness with no known cause or effective therapy. Population-based epidemiologic data on CFS prevalence are critical to put CFS in a realistic context for public health officials and others responsible for allocating resources.

Methods: Based on a random-digit dialing survey we ascertained CFS cases and controls to estimate the prevalence of CFS in metropolitan, urban, and rural populations of Georgia. This report focuses on the 5,623 of 19,381 respondents ages 18 to 59 years old. Fatigued (2,438), randomly selected unwell not fatigued (1,429) and randomly selected well (1,756) respondents completed telephone questionnaires concerning fatigue, other symptoms, and medical history. Subsets of those identified by interview as having CFS-like illness (292), chronic unwellness which was not CFS-like (268 - randomly selected), and well subjects (223, matched to those with CFS-like illness on sex, race, and age) completed a clinical evaluation.

Results:

n We estimated that 2.54% of persons 18 to 59 years of age suffered from CFS.

n There were no significant differences in prevalence of CFS between metropolitan, urban or rural populations or between white and black residents of the three regions.

n However, there were significant differences in female-to-male ratios of prevalence across the strata (metropolitan female : male 11.2 : 1, urban 1.7:1, rural 0.8:1).

Conclusions:

n We estimated that 2.54% of the Georgia population suffers from CFS, which is 6 to 10 fold higher than previous population-based estimates in other geographic areas.

n These differences may reflect broader screening criteria and differences in the application of the case definition, however we cannot exclude the possibility that CFS prevalence may be higher in Georgia than other areas where it has been measured.

n Although the study did not identify differences in overall prevalence between metropolitan, urban, and rural Georgia populations, it did suggest the need for additional stratified analyses by geographic strata



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If you think this definition is too broad, there's no a petition
Posted by: QuayMan
Apr 25, 2009
This found a prevalence of 2.54% or 1 in 40 adults. This higher rate is because it used a different definition to previous population studies (such as Jason (1999) or Reyes (2003)). If you are not happy with it and think the CDC are now including people who don't really have CFS, there's now a petition on the issue. It's at: http://CFSdefinitionpetition.notlong.com i.e. http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/empirical_defn_and_CFS_research
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