König, Rahel Susanne, Paris, Daniel Henry, Sollberger, Marc et al. · Heliyon · 2024 · DOI
This Swiss study surveyed 169 ME/CFS patients to understand how the disease affects their mental health and well-being. The researchers found that most patients experience significant emotional challenges, including sadness, hopelessness, and concerning rates of suicidal thoughts, often because others don't believe or understand their illness. The study shows that ME/CFS creates serious mental health burdens beyond just physical symptoms, and patients urgently need better medical, psychological, and social support.
This study provides first evidence quantifying the substantial mental health burden and suicidal ideation in ME/CFS patients—rates reportedly higher than other chronic diseases—highlighting that this is not merely a secondary psychological consequence but a critical clinical concern. The findings emphasize that disease misunderstanding and psychosomatic attribution are major contributors to patient suffering, making this evidence crucial for advocating improved recognition, medical legitimacy, and integrated mental health support in ME/CFS care.
This study establishes associations (not causation) between factors like psychosomatic attribution and suicidal thoughts; it does not prove that being told the disease is psychosomatic directly causes suicidal ideation, only that patients with suicidal thoughts frequently reported this experience. The cross-sectional design cannot determine whether mental health symptoms preceded or followed ME/CFS onset, and the small Swiss sample may not generalize to other populations. The study does not differentiate between passive suicidal thoughts and active suicide planning/attempts.
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
The first block is for the primary paper and is the citation you should use in research work. The atlas-snapshot line only applies if you are specifically referring to this atlas’s reading of the paper on the date shown.
Primary citation
König, Rahel Susanne, Paris, Daniel Henry, Sollberger, Marc, & Tschopp, Rea (2024). Identifying the mental health burden in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) patients in Switzerland: A pilot study.. Heliyon. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27031
BibTeX
@article{mecfsatlas-knig-2024-identifying-mental,
author = {König, Rahel Susanne and Paris, Daniel Henry and Sollberger, Marc and Tschopp, Rea},
title = {Identifying the mental health burden in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) patients in Switzerland: A pilot study.},
journal = {Heliyon},
year = {2024},
doi = {10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27031},
note = {PubMed: 38434357},
url = {https://www.mecfsatlas.com/evidence/knig-2024-identifying-mental},
}Atlas snapshot reference
ME/CFS Atlas. Generator v1 / Scanner v1.4 / policy v0.1. Accessed 2026-05-27. https://www.mecfsatlas.com/evidence/knig-2024-identifying-mental
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