Kalliope
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
CATO-senteret, a rehabilitation center for children and adolescents with a biopsychosocial approach to ME, invites health personell to a conference titled "When the body refuse".
I noticed both prof. Wyller and Lillebeth Larun (from the Cochrane review group on ME) among the speakers.
From introduction to the conference - google translation:
Medical Unexplained Disorders (MUPS), Bodily Distress Syndrome (BDS) and Functional Neurobiological Symptomatic Disorders are some of the common names used as collective terms for a variety of diseases or syndromes. Despite significant research activity, there have been no clear objective diagnostic criteria or good drug strategies.
Do you recognize ICPC diagnostic codes like P75, L84, L18, N95, P02, P82, L83, L29, A04, P78 and P29? Or ICD10 diagnostic codes such as F48.0, Z73.0, F45.4, F45.8, G93.3, R51, G44.2, R52.2, R52.9, M54.2, M54.5, M54.9, M79.1, M79.7?
Although some individuals and organizations have strong opinions about both causal relationships and therapies, the classical disease model may not seem to affect such disorders. However, when this is still used, it leads to repeated rounds in the specialist health service looking for a cause that "must exist". In the despair of absence of such causes, it opens for use of soothing treatment and alternative therapies.
BUT -
- What do we really know today about causal relationships and treatment that work?
against prolonged pain in the muscles and skeletal system without known cause (including fibromyalgia, neck, headache and back pain)
against different fatigue conditions and fatigue (including burnout and CFS / ME)
- What do we actually mean by the biopsychosocial explanation model and what does it in practice mean to use such a model? And should we not stop using the term psychosomatic disorders?
- Perhaps many patients have to accept that life does not meet the WHO criteria for good health - for most of us. But that it is about accepting that life is such - and to help find good coping strategies?
- What do we know about how important training / activity and participation are in these strategies?
Although we do not yet fully understand these states, how can we jointly utilize the knowledge available in the best possible way?
Therefore - are you?
General practitioner who struggles with patients with long-term pain and / or fatigue conditions, sleep disorders and addiction
Medical practitioner wondering how long to investigate these patients, how many times they will be assessed and how many interventions they will undergo - because you still believe that there must be a structural explanation of the radiant pain, on the paralysis, on the invalidating headache. ..
Physiotherapist wondering why none of your available therapies gives lasting effect
Psychologist or psychiatric nurse wondering what to do to help the same patients - and how to deal with all the medications they are on ..
School nurse wondering how to help the children return to school stability and out of social isolation
NAV employee wondering why no one in health care can help these users to regain their work ability.
Employed in the Directorate of Health, which will make good guidelines for the treatment of major diseases for the improvement of public health ..
... then you should sign up for this conference!
During this conference we will focus on recent theoretical explanatory models and status in ongoing research. And we will share practical experiences from the work of "the repetitions (stress, pain and sleep). We realize that the solution is not simple (a "quickfix"), but that development still gives hope to help many more to a better life and better functioning. Hope that there are actually methods and strategies that help, but that require us to think new in relation to interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral cooperation.
We hope to provide concrete advice on effective tools that can help you in your daily life - whether you are a clinician, a politician, a NAV employee or an employee in a directorate or department!
Welcome to cooperation!
From the programme:
Making sense of somatic symptoms: The Neurobiology of Body Talk - prof. and you psychiatrist Kasia Kozlowska
Adrenal burnout - theory and practice - Henrik Børsting Jacobsen - psychologist
The biopsychosocial model; model, method and understanding - Peter S. Lyby - psychologist
The opioid-epidemic - from despair to hope. The pain doctors experience with transition from drug focus to non-drug-mastering-strategies with longterm pain - Gunnar Olsson from Karolinska Hospital, Sweden
Chronic fatigue - symptom or illness? - prof. Vegard Bruun Wyller from Oslo university Hospital
Language matters - how to approach patients in crisis - Bård Fossli Jensen, MD
Panel debate with focus on the meeting between people versus usage of opioid and hypnotica.
Treatment of patients with somatic symptoms: Treatment principles and developing a treatment plan - Kasia Koslowska
Children and stress in a society-perspective; school attendance - Trond H. Diseth, prof. MD from Oslo University Hospital
Experiences with patients with long-lasting pain of unknown origin - Pro. Petter Borchgrevink from St. Olavs Hospital
How we work with "functional illness" - Lisbeth Frostholm, psychologist from the research clinic for functional disorders at Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark
Get vs GAT - what is it and how does it work? - Lillebeth Larun
How can (and should) ACT as method be implemented in the organisation - Trym Nordstand Jakobsen, psychologist
Panel debate: How do we continue our work with "functional neurobiological symptom conditions in Norway. Who takes responsibility for this group and how do we cooperate?
I noticed both prof. Wyller and Lillebeth Larun (from the Cochrane review group on ME) among the speakers.
From introduction to the conference - google translation:
Medical Unexplained Disorders (MUPS), Bodily Distress Syndrome (BDS) and Functional Neurobiological Symptomatic Disorders are some of the common names used as collective terms for a variety of diseases or syndromes. Despite significant research activity, there have been no clear objective diagnostic criteria or good drug strategies.
Do you recognize ICPC diagnostic codes like P75, L84, L18, N95, P02, P82, L83, L29, A04, P78 and P29? Or ICD10 diagnostic codes such as F48.0, Z73.0, F45.4, F45.8, G93.3, R51, G44.2, R52.2, R52.9, M54.2, M54.5, M54.9, M79.1, M79.7?
Although some individuals and organizations have strong opinions about both causal relationships and therapies, the classical disease model may not seem to affect such disorders. However, when this is still used, it leads to repeated rounds in the specialist health service looking for a cause that "must exist". In the despair of absence of such causes, it opens for use of soothing treatment and alternative therapies.
BUT -
- What do we really know today about causal relationships and treatment that work?
against prolonged pain in the muscles and skeletal system without known cause (including fibromyalgia, neck, headache and back pain)
against different fatigue conditions and fatigue (including burnout and CFS / ME)
- What do we actually mean by the biopsychosocial explanation model and what does it in practice mean to use such a model? And should we not stop using the term psychosomatic disorders?
- Perhaps many patients have to accept that life does not meet the WHO criteria for good health - for most of us. But that it is about accepting that life is such - and to help find good coping strategies?
- What do we know about how important training / activity and participation are in these strategies?
Although we do not yet fully understand these states, how can we jointly utilize the knowledge available in the best possible way?
Therefore - are you?
General practitioner who struggles with patients with long-term pain and / or fatigue conditions, sleep disorders and addiction
Medical practitioner wondering how long to investigate these patients, how many times they will be assessed and how many interventions they will undergo - because you still believe that there must be a structural explanation of the radiant pain, on the paralysis, on the invalidating headache. ..
Physiotherapist wondering why none of your available therapies gives lasting effect
Psychologist or psychiatric nurse wondering what to do to help the same patients - and how to deal with all the medications they are on ..
School nurse wondering how to help the children return to school stability and out of social isolation
NAV employee wondering why no one in health care can help these users to regain their work ability.
Employed in the Directorate of Health, which will make good guidelines for the treatment of major diseases for the improvement of public health ..
... then you should sign up for this conference!
During this conference we will focus on recent theoretical explanatory models and status in ongoing research. And we will share practical experiences from the work of "the repetitions (stress, pain and sleep). We realize that the solution is not simple (a "quickfix"), but that development still gives hope to help many more to a better life and better functioning. Hope that there are actually methods and strategies that help, but that require us to think new in relation to interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral cooperation.
We hope to provide concrete advice on effective tools that can help you in your daily life - whether you are a clinician, a politician, a NAV employee or an employee in a directorate or department!
Welcome to cooperation!
From the programme:
Making sense of somatic symptoms: The Neurobiology of Body Talk - prof. and you psychiatrist Kasia Kozlowska
Adrenal burnout - theory and practice - Henrik Børsting Jacobsen - psychologist
The biopsychosocial model; model, method and understanding - Peter S. Lyby - psychologist
The opioid-epidemic - from despair to hope. The pain doctors experience with transition from drug focus to non-drug-mastering-strategies with longterm pain - Gunnar Olsson from Karolinska Hospital, Sweden
Chronic fatigue - symptom or illness? - prof. Vegard Bruun Wyller from Oslo university Hospital
Language matters - how to approach patients in crisis - Bård Fossli Jensen, MD
Panel debate with focus on the meeting between people versus usage of opioid and hypnotica.
Treatment of patients with somatic symptoms: Treatment principles and developing a treatment plan - Kasia Koslowska
Children and stress in a society-perspective; school attendance - Trond H. Diseth, prof. MD from Oslo University Hospital
Experiences with patients with long-lasting pain of unknown origin - Pro. Petter Borchgrevink from St. Olavs Hospital
How we work with "functional illness" - Lisbeth Frostholm, psychologist from the research clinic for functional disorders at Aarhus University Hospital in Denmark
Get vs GAT - what is it and how does it work? - Lillebeth Larun
How can (and should) ACT as method be implemented in the organisation - Trym Nordstand Jakobsen, psychologist
Panel debate: How do we continue our work with "functional neurobiological symptom conditions in Norway. Who takes responsibility for this group and how do we cooperate?