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  1. Arvo

    Learning to feel tired: A learning trajectory towards chronic fatigue, 2018, Lenaert et al.

    This sounds like the stuff I'm reading from the Wessely School, Maudsley Hospital and Oxford psychiatry department in the 80s, so it's at least as "new" as the walkman. Unsubstantiated derogatory prejudice dressed up as science.
  2. Arvo

    NICE ME/CFS guideline - draft published for consultation - 10th November 2020

    Content Warning: discussing some nasty theories surrounding CBT. If you're not in the mood, just skip. I think I can say something about that. I'm researching the earliest years of the Wessely School (which is also why I on here way less than I had previously planned and anticipated when I...
  3. Arvo

    Interventions that manipulate how patients report symptoms as a separate form of bias

    @Barry , I was just thinking about your "bias-grounded-intervention bias". I'm not sure if the word "bias" is applicable here. The aim is to align the patient's perceptions with what the therapist deems "healthy/normal". It would be a perception-altering intervention bias. Given the very low...
  4. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    Fun with reference juggling! The reference in Hawtons piece to substantiate what he says about "avoiding an artificial mind-body dualism" (reference 15, Jennekens & Van Gijn), what is nothing more than a the turf claim, mentions that dividing the organic and psychological factor is artificial...
  5. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    @FMMM1 It is explicitly stated by the dutch branch of the psychosomatic enterprise that the goal of CBT is to stop CFS patients labelling themselves as such. A physical explanation would get in the way of that. (And it would get in the way of the smoke-and-mirror legitimacy of The Product CBT)...
  6. Arvo

    Interventions that manipulate how patients report symptoms as a separate form of bias

    This exactly. It is actually a topic I am collecting information about for a possible article. The similarity between some of the the tactics of domestic abusers and those applied by the Wessely School bunch are unmistakeable (isolation, gaslighting, sadistic abuse etc.), both as part of the...
  7. Arvo

    Interventions that manipulate how patients report symptoms as a separate form of bias

    As a non-expert in research methodology, I'd say it is. An explicit term for it is especially needed for dutch bps research, as influencing the participants is part and parcel of what they do. (It's of course also so for the UK papers, but I get the idea they are usually a bit more circumspect...
  8. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    @Snow Leopard You're trying to makes sense where there isn't any. The point isn't consistency or to express knowledge based on a solid foundation. The point at this stage is getting their profession/themselves acknowledged as valid participants in "CFS" research and treatment, which evolved into...
  9. Arvo

    Who was it that said being in support groups leads to poor outcome?

    Well hello there mr Kendell: From "Postviral fatigue syndrome: time for a new approach" in the debate section of the BMJ by David, Wessely, Pelosi, 1988 (Which also thanks Peter White for his helpful advice.)
  10. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    There's a LOT that can be said about this paper (and a lot to unpack), so I'm not going into all that now, but I want to make the following additional remarks to it: 1. Hawton was active in The Netherlands at this time. He was was working as a Boerhaave Professor of Consultative Psychiatry at...
  11. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    Translation of the figure of the model: 'Oorspronkelijke oorzaak' = 'original cause' Klachten (b.v. moeheid, spierpijn, depressiviteit) = Complaints (e.g. tiredness, muscle ache, being depressed) Overtuigingen (b.v. 'ik ben ziek', 'ik moet rust houden') = Convictions (e.g. 'I am ill', 'I have...
  12. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    Literature 1. Sharpe MC, Archard LC, Banatvala JE, et al. Guidelines for the conduct of research into the chronic fatigue syndrome. JR Soc Med 1991;84:118-21. 2. Lloyd AR, Hales JR, Gardevia SC. Muscle strength, endurance and recovery in the post-infectious fatigue syndrome. J Neurol...
  13. Arvo

    The chronic fatigue syndrome; psychiatric aspects, 1991, K.E. Hawton et al.

    While researching the origins of the ideas regarding ME, I came across this paper. I'm going to post it in full, translated, because I think it's also a document of key importance for UK researchers interested in the history of the Wessely School's ideas about ME. It appeared in Nederlands...
  14. Arvo

    Who was it that said being in support groups leads to poor outcome?

    I'm really sorry that happened to you @glennthefrog . It's only "truly odd" when you think about it from a normal, factual perspective. There is no reason or proof that support groups are bad for you, they are even actively encouraged in a lot of patient groups, because they can be a great...
  15. Arvo

    Who was it that said being in support groups leads to poor outcome?

    Another source: in June 1988, A. Scott from the ME Association London/Richmond and E.M. Goudsmit, Teddington (Engeland) wrote a response to two articles in the Dutch Journal of Medicine (NTvG). Link to their response It shows that in 1988 patient support groups were already busy...
  16. Arvo

    Cognitive behavioral therapy for treatment of chronic primary insomnia: a randomized controlled trial, 2001, Edinger et al.

    Am I missing something? I fail to see where exactly the "C" from CBT comes into play, or which dysfunctional beliefs/cognitive distortions are being addressed here. The whole core idea of CBT is that those drive the B, distorted behaviour. People were getting sleep hygiëne instructions that...
  17. Arvo

    Cost-effectiveness of interventions for medically unexplained symptoms: A systematic review, 2018, Wortman et al

    Yes. They worked closely together with the UK group, and helped build the illusion of a foundation under their pet theories, both by creating lots of papers and resource material (the PACE trial uses 3 of the Nijmegen group's papers in referral to criteria used, the therapy delivered and the...
  18. Arvo

    Cost-effectiveness of interventions for medically unexplained symptoms: A systematic review, 2018, Wortman et al

    Ok, so this *points up* wasn't true, given Bleijenberg's past and interests. It was an excuse. Bleijenberg was already doing behavioral treatments for things like "speaking stomach syndrome"(basically if you had a noisy belly) or (I think the english term is) anismus (When you can't relax your...
  19. Arvo

    Who was it that said being in support groups leads to poor outcome?

    I think that might be a good idea, also because their ideas seem to sprout almost fully formed as a whole into being. There seems to be a distinct period of consolidation of the whole unfounded psychosomatic construct for ME between roughly 1989-1992, which leads back to Wessely's articles...
  20. Arvo

    Who was it that said being in support groups leads to poor outcome?

    May 30th 1991, Patient Care (journal that went to 115,000 clinicians): The article Tips on chronic fatigue syndrome, by Buchwald, Gantz, Katon and Manu. (Buchwald and Gantz later said that while they had been interviewed for the article, they had not authored it.). A seemingly nasty article...
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