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Key Pointshttps://www.msn.com/en-us/money/economy/what-is-the-k-shaped-economy-and-why-is-it-a-problem/ar-AA1QpHuF
• Wages for the top 25% of the U.S. workforce are rising by 4.6% annually,
while the lowest quarter sees only 3.6% annual gains.
• Financial stress is increasing for lower-income households,
with 29% living paycheck to paycheck and a record 6.7% of subprime auto loans delinquent.
• The economy’s growth is increasingly reliant on affluent households,
as lower-income consumers face rising costs and reduced spending capacity.
© 2015 Mutual Fund Observer. All rights reserved.
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Comments
https://www.morningbrew.com/stories/2025/11/03/evidence-of-k-shaped-economy-popping-up-everywhere
-The affluent doing very well along with the booming stock market and the appreciation of their homes in the inventory-crunched real estate market.
-Nearly everyone else faltering due to a shaky job market, high interest rates, and/or inflation.
Auto: In September, the cost of a new vehicle passed the $50,000 mark for the first time, according to Cox Automotive’s Kelley Blue Book. And repossession volume passing through Manheim, the auction group owned by Cox, was up 12% through the end of September on an annualized basis, according to the Wall Street Journal’s deep-dive into the rise of auto repos.
Airlines: Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said that sales of premium seats would exceed those of coach seats for at least one or two quarters in 2026.
Food & bev: Coca-Cola CEO James Quincey told CNBC that sales of its premium brands, like Smartwater, Topo Chico, and Fairlife, are juicing the company’s sales, while Coke demand is up at dollar stores, as well as at amusement parks frequented by higher spenders.
Consumer goods: Apple grew by double digits last quarter, thanks to strong sales of the $799 iPhone 17. And while economist Leo Feler told Marketplace that “everyone has kept buying health and personal care items,” how and when they buy them has changed. Wealthier shoppers are making hauls at Costco, while budget-constrained shoppers use up everything at home before going shopping.
Zoom out: Economic trends suggest that the gap will widen rather than narrow. Economist Betsey Stevenson of the University of Michigan told Marketplace, “The real risk to a K-shaped economy is social and political instability."
How will this severely weakened consumer impact markets? Job growth appears to be key here. But, we know that all of 2025 was revised severely downward. And the January 2026 job numbers, besides being very hard to calculate, have a lot of economists very skeptical.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/13/k-shaped-economy-middle-class-spending.html
•The National Foundation for Credit Counseling predicts financial stress will reach an all-time high in the first quarter of this year.
•While spending growth for higher-income Americans remained stable over the last year, growth slowed for lower- and middle-income households, according to the Bank of America Institute.
•The expected boost in tax refunds this year may help prop up consumer spending. (But, is expected to be short-lived)
"The NFCC’s quarterly forecast projects that financial stress will reach an all-time high in the first quarter of this year, based on consumer behavior data from its national network of financial counseling agencies that serve more than 1 million clients."
"Financial stress is affecting more middle-income consumers ages 45 to 60, who can no longer borrow to fund their lifestyle, Croxson said. They would take on more credit to keep this spending going, but they can’t access it,” he said. “They have reached their capacity.”
The recent numbers are unsettling. In addition to what the above article cites about the consumer, slower than expected economic growth appears to be upon us. Jobs revised down, existing home sales very much down, inflation still running a bit high. The U.S. markets are lagging a decent bond fund YTD.
We have durable goods orders coming this week, they are expected to be weak. Was spending pulled up pre-tariff? It's what I did! Fourth quarter 2025 GDP is estimated +2.8%. Not bad, but likely buoyed by massive AI spending. Which means that it might be misleading about broader economic health. Recent holiday retail numbers were underwhelming.
We all know that markets can remain irrational for long periods. Then, they tend to correct hard and fast. So, what should drive one's allocations? FOMO or just plain fear? I am not making predictions, just asking questions.
hard to make more of these things other than (yet another) fragility indicator.
what happens when tech infrastructure capex no longer makes up for consumer spending in gdp?
same or more consumer spending by the wealthy, for things they certainly dont need at the prices they transact, is risky and not easy to re-balance. i see some structural changes for this far outlasting the next several verdicts on gop running the country.
likewise, i see automated flows into american index funds with similar apprehension.
one thing i always try to look for is whether trump has knocked america off its ~15 yr re-industrialization trend.
the result so far says 'maybe no' for basic goods, and 'certainly yes' for complex goods (those requiring more than ~6 significant production steps).
no luck in finding reliable sites tracking this...jpm is trying.
A weak consumer?
Can wealthy consumers keep it all elevated?"
I've read that the "wealthy" have been responsible for much of the recent consumer spending.
Many of these folks are feeling flush due to significant equity appreciation from 2023-2025.
If U.S. equities experience a sharp correction—which can occur at any time for no particular reason—
the "wealthy" may subsequently curtail their spending.
This could create a nasty feedback loop which further propels stock markets downward.
Look, we could already be in a recession. I have a hard time seeing where we would be INFORMED that we are. It's not that difficult to fudge the numbers or just continue to delay the reports (already happening).
You know its coming.
=================
Claude: I'll help you find reliable sites tracking America's re-industrialization trend. Let me search for sources that focus on this topic. (Searched the web)
=================
America reindustrialization trend tracking data
10 results

What Is Reindustrialization For? - American Compass
americancompass.org

Reindustrialization of Europe and US 2025 - Capgemini USA
www.capgemini.com

Reindustrialization - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
How Reindustrialization Is Boosting U.S. Manufacturing – and Challenging Utilities - EPRI Journal | EPRI Journal
eprijournal.com

Manufacturing resilience: Reindustrialization in the United States - Capgemini USA
www.capgemini.com

Infographic: Manufacturing reindustrialization trends 2024
www.capgemini.com

US Reindustrialization: A True Industrial Revolution – Analysis
www.eurasiareview.com

DelMorgan & Co.’s Analysis of the U.S. Manufacturing Rebuild: Reindustrialization, Onshoring and the CHIPS Act - DelMorgan & Co.
delmorganco.com

American Reindustrialization: Empty Promises vs Massive Opportunities | by Jonathan Healy | Cathay Innovation | Medium
medium.com

The New Economic Geography of Reindustrialization
thephiladelphiacitizen.org
manufacturing construction spending tracking database
10 results

Total Construction Spending: Manufacturing in the United States (TLMFGCONS) | FRED | St. Louis Fed
fred.stlouisfed.org

Total Construction Spending: Manufacturing in the United States (TLMFGCON) | FRED | St. Louis Fed
fred.stlouisfed.org

US Manufacturing Construction Spending (Monthly) - United S…
ycharts.com

Manufacturing Construction Spending Declines Under Trump - FactCheck.org
www.factcheck.org

Construction Spending
www.census.gov

Total Construction Spending: Total Construction in the United States (TTLCONS) | FRED | St. Louis Fed
fred.stlouisfed.org

Monthly Subnational Construction Spending: Private Manufacturing
www.census.gov

Total Private Construction Spending: Manufacturing in the United States (PRMFGCON) | FRED | St. Louis Fed
fred.stlouisfed.org

MONTHLY CONSTRUCTION SPENDING, AUGUST 2025
www.census.gov

Total Construction Spending: Manufacturing in the United States | FRED | St. Louis Fed
fred.stlouisfed.org
Done
=================
Let me search for a few more specific tracking sources and databases. (Searched the web)
Bureau Economic Analysis manufacturing reshoring tracker
10 results

Where Could Reshoring Manufacturers Find Workers?
www.clevelandfed.org

Reshoring Initiative 2024 Annual Report, Plus 1Q2025 1
reshorenow.org

Reshoring Initiative 2022 Data Report 1
reshorenow.org

1 Fifth Third Bank Executive Insights on the U.S. Manufacturing Resurgence
www.53.com

Proven trusted talent acquisition 2025 Reshoring Survey Report Harry Moser
reshorenow.org

Reshoring American Manufacturing: Why It May Not Be Possible—or Even Desirable | ThinkSet | BRG
www.thinkbrg.com

Construction & Manufacturing Reshoring Trends in the U.S.
institute.bankofamerica.com

A shrinking workforce may thwart US manufacturing ambitions
www.deloitte.com

Reshoring Initiative 2023 Annual Report 1
reshorenow.org

Reshoring Report Shows Progress, and Risks | Reshoring Initiative | American Machinist
www.americanmachinist.com
Done
=================
Based on my search, I've found several reliable sites that track America's reindustrialization trend. Here are the key sources:
Government Data Sources
1. FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) - St. Louis Fed
• Tracks manufacturing construction spending monthly from 2002 to present FRED
• Free, public access with downloadable data
• URL: fred.stlouisfed.org/series/TLMFGCONS
2. U.S. Census Bureau
• Publishes monthly construction spending reports
• Launched experimental Monthly Subnational Construction Spending data at the division level in 2023 U.S. Census Bureau
• URL: census.gov/construction/c30/c30index.html
Industry Research & Tracking Organizations
3. Reshoring Initiative
• The most comprehensive tracker specifically for reshoring/reindustrialization
• Has tracked 1.7 million new jobs from reshoring and FDI since 2010 American Machinist
• Publishes annual reports with detailed job announcements, industry breakdowns, and state-level data
• URL: reshorenow.org
4. Capgemini Research Institute
• Surveys 1,400+ senior executives annually across 13 sectors and 11 countries Capgemini
• Tracks reindustrialization investment trends (projected $4.7 trillion over next 3 years)
• URL: capgemini.com/insights/research-library/
5. American Compass
• Conducts surveys on public attitudes toward reindustrialization American Compass
• Focuses on policy and workforce implications
• URL: americancompass.org
Before I provide more details, I have a few questions to help point you to the most useful sources:
=================
My response: Thank you- a person on MFO asked that question, and I thought that I'd confer with you about it. I'll forward your response, and if he needs additional info I'll get back with you.
=================
Claude:
You're welcome! I'm glad I could help. That's a good collection of reliable sources that should give them a solid starting point for tracking the reindustrialization trend—from government data (FRED, Census Bureau) to specialized industry trackers (Reshoring Initiative) and research organizations.
If they come back with follow-up questions or need more specific sources based on their particular focus area, feel free to reach out. I can dig deeper into sector-specific data, regional breakdowns, or other specialized tracking resources as needed.
=================
@Old_Joe thanks for that introduction to Claude.
Here's Claude using Microsoft Excel to help you find savings by analyzing your budget:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=YAv0Efy3TGs
I asked it to list the references, links to studies that were free to access. It took it over 30 minutes, but it did produce what I asked for.
I then asked for a summary of the criticisms I mentioned above and it produced a decent list with references
It can only access data and article that are not behind a paywall, so that leaves out a lot of the medical literature, but It took 30 minutes to do what it would have taken me at least a full day or longer.
I am pretty impressed. It might even be worth $17 a month
TLDR: When asked for the time it described how to make a watch.
My question-
Is it possible for you to find all of the Randomized Controlled Trials for Long Covid and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome? Or if not all, as many as possible? I'll get back to you if I have a further inquiry later.Thanks very much. The following four sections are a poorly formatted text reproduction of the complete report. The division into the four sections is arbitrary- simply tried to get as much into a section as the MFO limits will allow.
The text formatting on the original Claude reply was much, much better than what is reproduced here. The original is neatly arranged in columns, nicely spaced, with various text fonts and font emphasis used where needed.
So here we go:
RCTs in Long COVID & ME/CFS: A Comprehensive Research Compendium
Compiled: February 2026 Scope: Treatment, prevention, and diagnostic/mechanistic RCTs; all statuses (completed, ongoing, published) Purpose: Academic/research review
Methodological note: This compendium draws on systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and individual trial records identified via PubMed, ClinicalTrials.gov, and curated databases (MSK Library COVID Impacts Guide, Health Rising, FNIH RECOVER-TLC). It is comprehensive but not formally exhaustive — a gold-standard systematic review would require multi-database searching with a librarian-developed strategy and deduplication. For a complete registry-based list, searches on ClinicalTrials.gov (terms: "long COVID" OR "post-acute sequelae" OR "PASC" OR "ME/CFS" AND "randomized") and WHO ICTRP are recommended.
KEY UMBRELLA RESOURCES
Before the individual trials, these are the highest-value secondary sources that aggregate RCT evidence:
Resource
Description
Zeraatkar et al., BMJ 2024
Living systematic review of Long COVID RCTs (searched to Dec 2023; 24 RCTs included)
Chee YJ et al., J Med Virol 2023
Systematic review of pharmacological Long COVID RCTs
Ivlev I et al., J Gen Intern Med 2025
Narrative review; 26 Long COVID RCTs synthesized
eClinicalMedicine / Lancet 2025
Meta-analysis of 51 Long COVID RCTs (searched to July 2025)
Kim JH et al., J Transl Med 2024
Systematic review: 60 ME/CFS RCTs (searched to Jan 2024)
Kim SY et al., J Transl Med 2020
Systematic review: 56 ME/CFS RCTs (searched to April 2019)
Seton KA et al., J Clin Med 2024
Overview of clinical trials in ME/CFS
CDC Systematic Review 2023 (Federal Register)
U.S. government evidence review for ME/CFS diagnosis & treatment
PART I: LONG COVID RCTs
A. PHARMACOLOGICAL INTERVENTIONS
Antivirals (Treatment of Established Long COVID)
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
STOP-PASC
Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir (Paxlovid) 15-day vs. placebo
~155
Completed 2024
No significant improvement in PROMIS-29 Physical Health at day 28
Geng et al., JAMA Intern Med 2024;184(9):1024
PAX LC
Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir 15-day vs. placebo/ritonavir (Phase 2, decentralized)
~119 screened
Completed 2025
Did not significantly improve outcomes vs placebo
Sawano et al., Lancet Infect Dis 2025;25(8):936
Antivirals / Immunomodulators (Prevention of Long COVID — given in acute phase)
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
COVID-OUT
Metformin, ivermectin, fluvoxamine (factorial design, Phase 3)
1,431
Completed 2023
Metformin reduced long COVID incidence by ~41% (HR 0.59); no effect for ivermectin or fluvoxamine
Bramante et al., Lancet Infect Dis 2023;23(10):1119
ACTIV-6 (metformin arm)
Metformin vs. placebo in acute COVID, 6-month PASC follow-up
2,983
Completed 2025
Results published 2025 (PASC outcomes); primary results pending full publication
medRxiv 2025 preprint
Immunomodulators (Treatment of Established Long COVID)
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
BC007 Phase II
BC007 (aptamer targeting autoantibodies vs. GPCRs)
—
Completed/Terminated
Did not demonstrate superiority over placebo; trial suspended
IDSOCIETY.org 2025 update
REVERSE-LC / RECOVER-TLC baricitinib expansion
Baricitinib (JAK inhibitor) for neurocognitive & cardiopulmonary Long COVID
Large (multi-site)
Enrolling from early 2026
Ongoing; results expected ~2027
FNIH RECOVER-TLC 2025
Sipavibart (monoclonal antibody)
Anti-spike monoclonal antibody vs. placebo (Schmidt Initiative/SILC-funded)
—
Enrolling 2025
Ongoing
NSU Newsroom 2025
AER002
Long-acting human IgG1 mAb neutralizing SARS-CoV-2 spike
—
Ongoing
—
Zhang et al., Infect Dis Immun 2025
Neuropsychiatric / Cognitive Agents
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
McIntyre et al.
Vortioxetine (antidepressant/pro-cognitive) vs. placebo
—
Completed
Positive cognitive outcomes reported
McIntyre et al., Brain 2024;147(3):849
Nakamura et al.
Donepezil (acetylcholinesterase inhibitor) for fatigue & psychological symptoms
—
Completed 2025
Published JAMA Netw Open 2025;8(3):e250728
Nakamura et al., JAMA Netw Open 2025
Harandi et al.
Amantadine for post-COVID fatigue (open-label RCT)
—
Completed
Significant fatigue reduction
Sci Rep 2024;14:1343
Kuut et al.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) for severe fatigue, 1:1 vs. care as usual
114
Completed 2023
Fatigue reduction with CBT
Lancet EClinMed 2023
RECOVER-TLC low-dose naltrexone (LDN) arm
LDN for Long COVID fatigue (ages 6-25)
Large
Protocol finalized 2025; not yet enrolling
—
FNIH RECOVER-TLC 2025
Metabolic / Anti-inflammatory
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Hansen et al.
Coenzyme Q10 (high-dose) vs. placebo, crossover
—
Completed 2023
No significant benefit
Lancet Reg Health Eur 2023;24:100539
Lau et al.
SIM01 synbiotic (probiotics + prebiotics) for PACS
—
Completed 2023
Significant improvement in fatigue, memory, cognition, GI
Lancet Infect Dis 2023
Antifibrotics (Pulmonary Long COVID)
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Pirfenidone Phase II
Pirfenidone for post-COVID pulmonary fibrosis
—
Ongoing/completed
—
RECOVER call to action 2023
PINCER
Nintedanib vs. pirfenidone for post-COVID pulmonary fibrosis
—
Ongoing
—
RECOVER call to action 2023
Deupirfenidone (LYT-100)
For post-COVID respiratory complications
168
Completed July 2022
Results expected 2023
RECOVER call to action 2023
Other Pharmacological
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
RECOVER-TLC GLP-1 agonist arm
GLP-1 receptor agonist for Long COVID
Large
Not yet enrolling (2025)
—
FNIH RECOVER-TLC 2025
Vericiguat Phase II
Guanylate cyclase inhibitor (licensed for heart failure) for post-COVID & post-COVID ME/CFS
—
Ongoing
—
Frontiers in Medicine 2023
RECOVER-TLC stellate ganglion block arm
Nerve block intervention
Large
Not yet enrolling (2025)
—
FNIH RECOVER-TLC 2025
B. NON-PHARMACOLOGICAL / REHABILITATIVE INTERVENTIONS
Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Efrati et al. (Israel)
HBOT vs. sham in post-COVID condition
73
Completed
Improved neurocognition, sleep, pain
Sci Rep 2022 (original); longitudinal follow-up Sci Rep 2024;14:3604
HOT-LoCO (Sweden)
HBOT for Long COVID, Phase II RCT
—
Ongoing (interim safety report 2023)
Safety acceptable; efficacy results pending
BMC Infect Dis 2023;23:33
Neuromodulation / Brain Stimulation
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
tDCS trials (multiple)
Transcranial direct current stimulation (multiple NCT#s: NCT05780450, NCT05092516)
Small
Ongoing/completed
Mixed small RCTs
Zhang et al.; Frontiers 2023
Vagus nerve stimulation
NCT05918965
—
Registered
—
Zhang et al., Infect Dis Immun 2025
Stellate ganglion block
NCT06055270
—
Registered; RECOVER expanding
Promising; awaits pivotal trial
FNIH RECOVER-TLC 2025
Exercise / Rehabilitation
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Romanet et al.
Exercise training for Long COVID dyspnoea, multicentre RCT
—
Completed
Improved dyspnea
Ann Phys Rehabil Med 2023;66:101765
Pehlivan et al.
Tele-COVID: Post-discharge telerehabilitation RCT
—
Completed
Positive
Ann Thorac Med 2022;17:110
Okan et al.
Breathing exercises via telemedicine, RCT
—
Completed
Positive
Clin Nurs Res 2022;31:771
Rodriguez-Blanco et al.
Telerehabilitation therapeutic exercise 14-day, post-COVID
—
Completed
Effective
J Clin Med 2023;12
Rodriguez-Blanco et al.
Breathing vs. strength exercises via telerehabilitation, acute phase RCT
—
Completed
Both arms effective
Clin Rehabil 2022;36:486
Samper-Pardo et al.
ReCOVery APP telerehabilitation, 3-month RCT
—
Completed
Positive
Sci Rep 2023;13:7943
Cardiopulmonary telerehabilitation (functional exercises)
Post-COVID hospital discharge RCT
—
Completed 2025
Positive
J Telemed Telecare 2025;31:311
Multiple additional exercise RCTs
(51 total exercise RCTs in July 2025 meta-analysis)
4,026 total
Various
Meta-analysis: exercise, respiratory muscle training, telerehab all show cardiopulmonary benefit
eClinicalMedicine/Lancet 2025
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Romanet et al.
Exercise training for Long COVID dyspnoea, multicentre RCT
—
Completed
Improved dyspnea
Ann Phys Rehabil Med 2023;66:101765
Pehlivan et al.
Tele-COVID: Post-discharge telerehabilitation RCT
—
Completed
Positive
Ann Thorac Med 2022;17:110
Okan et al.
Breathing exercises via telemedicine, RCT
—
Completed
Positive
Clin Nurs Res 2022;31:771
Rodriguez-Blanco et al.
Telerehabilitation therapeutic exercise 14-day, post-COVID
—
Completed
Effective
J Clin Med 2023;12
Rodriguez-Blanco et al.
Breathing vs. strength exercises via telerehabilitation, acute phase RCT
—
Completed
Both arms effective
Clin Rehabil 2022;36:486
Samper-Pardo et al.
ReCOVery APP telerehabilitation, 3-month RCT
—
Completed
Positive
Sci Rep 2023;13:7943
Cardiopulmonary telerehabilitation (functional exercises)
Post-COVID hospital discharge RCT
—
Completed 2025
Positive
J Telemed Telecare 2025;31:311
Multiple additional exercise RCTs
(51 total exercise RCTs in July 2025 meta-analysis)
4,026 total
Various
Meta-analysis: exercise, respiratory muscle training, telerehab all show cardiopulmonary benefit
eClinicalMedicine/Lancet 2025
Olfactory Rehabilitation
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
D'Ascanio et al.
Olfactory training vs. PEA-LUT (palmitoylethanolamide + luteolin)
—
Completed
Preliminary benefit with PEA-LUT
Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 2021;25:4156
Di Stadio et al.
Olfactory training + PEA-LUT vs. placebo, multicentre double-blind RCT
—
Completed
Improved olfactory function
Curr Neuropharmacol 2022;20:2001
Di Stadio et al.
Parosmia: olfactory training + ultramicronized PEA-LUT
—
Completed 2023
Positive
Biomedicines 2023;11
Steroid sprays (nasal)
For Long COVID olfactory dysfunction
—
Multiple small RCTs
Modest benefit
Meta-analysis 2025
Acupuncture
NCT#
Intervention
Status
NCT06633666
Acupuncture for Long COVID
Registered
NCT06476496
Acupuncture for Long COVID
Registered
NCT05890508
Acupuncture
Registered
NCT05212688
Acupuncture
Registered
PART II: ME/CFS RCTs
Note: ME/CFS has a 30+ year history of RCTs. The following covers major categories. For a complete list, see the CDC/AHRQ systematic review (2023) and Kim SY et al. (2020), which identified 56 eligible RCTs through April 2019, and Kim JH et al. (2024), which identified 60 RCTs through January 2024.
A. IMMUNE-BASED INTERVENTIONS
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Fluge et al. (Phase II)
Rituximab (anti-CD20 B-cell depletion) vs. placebo
30
Completed
Delayed symptom improvement vs. placebo at 6–10 months (not statistically significant at 3 months)
PLoS One 2011
RituxME (Phase III, Norway)
Rituximab multiple infusions vs. placebo
151
Completed
No clinical improvement; increased serious AEs
Fluge et al., Ann Intern Med 2019;171(1):22
Rintatolimod Phase II (AMP-501)
Rintatolimod (Ampligen; TLR3 agonist) IV vs. placebo
~92
Completed
Statistically significant improvement in exercise tolerance
Strayer et al.
Rintatolimod Phase III (AMP-516)
Rintatolimod IV twice weekly vs. placebo, multi-site
234
Completed
Significant improvement in exercise tolerance in 2–8 year illness subgroup (51.2% improved by ≥25%)
PLoS One 2020
Vericiguat Phase II
Guanylate cyclase inhibitor for ME/CFS & post-COVID ME/CFS
—
Ongoing
—
Frontiers in Medicine 2023
BC007
Aptamer for GPCR autoantibodies — case report/small; Phase II in Long COVID failed
Small
Terminated in LC
Under investigation in ME/CFS subgroups
Seton et al. 2024
B. ANTIVIRAL INTERVENTIONS
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Valganciclovir RCT
Valganciclovir (for HHV-6/EBV-associated ME/CFS)
Small
Completed
Some benefit in biomarker-confirmed HHV-6+ cases
Montoya et al.
Valacyclovir (VACV) / artesunate
Antiviral RCTs
Small
Completed
Promising preliminary results
Seton et al., J Clin Med 2024
C. PHARMACOLOGICAL — NEUROMODULATORS
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Galama et al. 1996
Fluoxetine (SSRI) vs. placebo
—
Completed
No significant benefit
Lancet 1996;347:858
Valdizán Usón & Idiazábal 2008
Methylphenidate (immediate-release)
—
Completed
Some improvement in cognition/fatigue
Published
Blockmans & Persoons 2016
Methylphenidate long-term in CFS
—
Completed
Some benefit
Acta Clin Belg 2016;71:407
Sildenafil pilot RCT
Sildenafil (PDE5 inhibitor) for ME/CFS fatigue
11 (5 treated, 6 placebo)
Completed (NCT00598585)
Significant fatigue improvement
Small pilot
Fampridine RCT
Potassium channel blocker (approved for MS)
—
Ongoing
—
Frontiers in Medicine 2023
Dexamphetamine
Stimulant; first evidence for efficacy
—
Early-stage RCT
Promising
Frontiers in Medicine 2023
Lithium
Anti-inflammatory/antidepressant
—
Ongoing RCT
—
Frontiers in Medicine 2023
Galantamine
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
—
Registered
—
D. METABOLIC / DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Multiple RCTs
NADH alone or with CoQ10
—
Completed (multiple)
Modest fatigue improvement in some
Seton et al. 2024
Multiple RCTs
Coenzyme Q10
—
Completed
Mixed results
Systematic reviews
Multiple RCTs
L-carnitine
—
Completed
Limited evidence
—
Multiple RCTs
Vitamins C, D, B12, magnesium
—
Various
Small trials
—
Network meta-analysis 2025 (47 RCTs)
Interventions for depression/depressive symptoms in CFS (47 RCTs, 4,028 participants)
4,028
Published 2025
Diet therapy most effective for depressive symptoms; followed by moxibustion
medRxiv / published preprint 2025
E. PSYCHOLOGICAL / BEHAVIOURAL INTERVENTIONS
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
PACE Trial (UK)
Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) and Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) vs. adaptive pacing and specialist medical care
641
Completed 2011
Controversial: modest self-reported improvement; criticised for protocol changes and outcome measure shifts
White et al., Lancet 2011
FINE Trial
Pragmatic rehabilitation vs. supportive listening
296
Completed 2010
No significant benefit at 70 weeks
Wearden et al., Lancet 2010
Multiple CBT and GET RCTs
Various psychological/behavioural
Various
Completed
Overall: limited and contested evidence; patient groups report harms from GET
CDC Systematic Review 2023
⚠️ Important context: The PACE trial's findings and methodology have been extensively debated in the ME/CFS community. The CDC no longer recommends GET or CBT as primary treatments following its 2023 systematic review, which found insufficient evidence.
F. NON-PHARMACOLOGICAL
Trial / Study
Intervention
N
Status
Key Finding
Reference
Dietary interventions (multiple RCTs)
Various dietary approaches
—
Various
Diet therapy shows promise for depressive symptoms
Network meta-analysis 2025
Acupuncture + moxibustion RCTs
Traditional Chinese medicine
Multiple small RCTs
Various
Limited evidence; ongoing interest
Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) for ME/CFS
LDN (registered ACTRN12624001162505)
—
Ongoing/registered 2024
Pre-post data positive; no RCT published yet as of 2025
Polo et al. 2019; systematic review 2025
Probiotics
Various probiotic formulations
Multiple small RCTs
Various
Some preliminary benefit
Seton et al. 2024
PART III: OVERLAPPING LONG COVID / ME/CFS RCTs
Trial / Study
Intervention
Conditions
Status
ACTRN12624001162505
Low-dose naltrexone
ME/CFS + Long COVID
Ongoing 2024
Vericiguat Phase II
Guanylate cyclase inhibitor
Post-COVID ME/CFS
Ongoing
RECOVER-TLC LDN arm
LDN (ages 6-25)
Long COVID (overlapping with ME/CFS phenotype)
Protocol 2025
BC007
Autoantibody aptamer
Both
Terminated in LC; under investigation
PART IV: ONGOING / REGISTERED TRIALS — LONG COVID (Selected from ClinicalTrials.gov / WHO ICTRP)
NCT# / Trial
Intervention
Status (as of Feb 2026)
NCT05780450
tDCS (brain stimulation) for Long COVID
Ongoing
NCT05092516
tDCS
Ongoing
NCT05918965
Vagus nerve stimulation
Ongoing
NCT06055270
Stellate ganglion block
Ongoing
NCT06633666, NCT06476496, NCT05890508, NCT05212688
Acupuncture
Ongoing
NCT05668091
PAX LC (Nirmatrelvir/ritonavir) — now closed
Completed
REVERSE-LC (Wes Ely, Vanderbilt)
Baricitinib for neurocognitive/cardiopulmonary LC
Enrolling 2026 via RECOVER expansion
NCT06147050
Metformin for reducing fatigue in Long COVID
Registered
Sipavibart (SILC-funded)
Anti-spike monoclonal antibody
Enrolling 2025
AER002
Anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG1 mAb
Ongoing
GLP-1 agonist (RECOVER-TLC)
Semaglutide or similar
Protocol stage 2025
SUMMARY STATISTICS
Domain
Approximate number of RCTs identified
Long COVID (treatment RCTs, completed/published, to 2025)
~51 (per eClinicalMedicine 2025 meta-analysis); ~26 (per J Gen Intern Med 2025 narrative review)
Long COVID (all statuses including ongoing/registered)
100+ per WHO ICTRP systematic reviews
ME/CFS (RCTs to 2024)
~60 (Kim et al. 2024); ~56 (Kim et al. 2020)
ME/CFS (historical total)
~80–100+ across all interventions per CDC 2023 review
RECOMMENDED NEXT STEPS FOR SYSTEMATIC SEARCHING
For a truly exhaustive review, the following search strategy is recommended:
1 Databases: PubMed, Cochrane CENTRAL, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Web of Science, WHO ICTRP, ClinicalTrials.gov
2 Key search terms: ("long COVID" OR "post-acute sequelae" OR "PASC" OR "post-COVID-19") AND "randomized controlled trial"; ("myalgic encephalomyelitis" OR "chronic fatigue syndrome" OR "ME/CFS") AND "randomized controlled trial"
3 Date range: Inception to present
4 Key living sources to monitor:
◦ Zeraatkar et al. BMJ Living Systematic Review (updated regularly)
◦ Cochrane COVID-19 Register
◦ MSK Library COVID Impacts Guide (libguides.mskcc.org/CovidImpacts/LCtreatment)
◦ RECOVER-TLC (fnih.org)
◦ Health Rising (healthrising.org) for ME/CFS and Long COVID trial tracking
The text formatting on the original Claude reply was much, much better than what is reproduced here. The original is neatly arranged in columns, nicely spaced, with various text fonts and font emphasis used where needed. The various sections are nicely separated by horizontal lines of various thickness.
Generally, very readable.
OJ
I'm not inclined to pay for it when I can get it for free, or just do it the old-fashioned way digging through pubmed or google scholar.
I suppose I should consider myself lucky that there's just not near as much published material on the topics of interest to me.
my main takeaway on re-industrialization is this :
are we on track for correct prioritization AND implementation regarding american re-industrialization? (including canada+mexico , as i think that can be salvaged post-trump)
roughly, we have 2 main groups:
*basic industry , such as chemicals, and most items needing less than ~6 separate\dislocated processing and finishing steps. (this is the ed conway foundational view)
*high value-add industry, where we do not remain permanent hostage to the total supply chain (e.g., rare earths). this is usually where capital is most apt to flow; vehicles, electronics, etc...
the best i can tell no one in the gop has even mentioned this dilemma, in huge contrast to raiding hyundai plants and other such brilliant strategy.
by the way, no matter how many sources AI cites, it ignores different sources that appear to have conflicting data. this is all on the reader regarding likely forward prospects.
as an example of such, american industrial construction seems on trend, but industrial construction productivity is way down, and currently at the bottom of all sectors. i can take a guess at the likely outcome since being at the very beginning of massive re-industrialization where global trade continues to fracture.
Why do you want to know? The DOW is almost 50K.
We liberated 2,600 FDA positions, so no one left to answer science questions.