Andy
Senior Member (Voting rights)
They talk, in the abstract, about chronic fatigue only, but the patients they discuss have gone through a "CFS/ME" assessment, so may or may not have ME.
This part possibly explains a bit more clearly what the authors are actually talking about in this paper.
Open access, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01459740.2021.1883011Patients with chronic fatigue receive advice to improve symptom management and well-being. This advice is based on ideas of self-management and is conveyed during clinical assessment as “activity regulation.” Based on ethnographic fieldwork in a hospital clinic in Norway, we show how these patients attempt to demonstrate their competences and everyday concerns, and how the ideology of self-management frames the hope for recovery and crafts a subject with the ability to improve. Patients, however, linger between everyday social predicaments and ideals of healthy living, and are caught up in cultural models of care that deflect everyday concerns and agency.
This part possibly explains a bit more clearly what the authors are actually talking about in this paper.
Paragraph breaks added for easier reading.Over a 3-month period of fieldwork in 2017, the first author observed patients during consultations with health professionals belonging to a special multidisciplinary team at the university hospital in Tromsø, Norway. The team had as its specific task to assess each referred patient and reach a diagnostic decision, whether the patient could be diagnosed with CFS/ME, or if the patient’s complaints were best explained by another diagnosis.
Following a decision on either CFS/ME or another fatigue diagnosis, the team would offer self-management in terms of coping courses, e-learning platforms, and detailed advice on how to improve a balance in daily activity. The study was designed to explore questions about the course of a diagnostic process in a team of professionals, especially the negotiation between health professional and patient, and the presentation of symptoms by the patient and their mutual interpretations and understandings.
What triggered our attention early on in the fieldwork was the way talking about “daily activity” pervaded all consultations, even before a diagnosis was reached. It was both part of the diagnostic criteria, central to all encounters, and part of the advice on self-care, framing the understanding of the patients’ complaints. Management of activities and a specific way of talking about activity became the pivotal point for how to improve the present situation for most patients, regardless of which fatigue diagnosis.
This approach, based on “activity regulation”, made us realize the power of talking about “activity” as central to both assessment and self-care advice. Both health professionals and patients referred to highly valued cultural norms pertaining to activity, however in different ways.
Here we explore how these discursive positions permeate the intersubjective diagnostic process. Hence, we do not concentrate on the diagnostic decision process but on the logics and particulars of self-management that run through the clinical sessions and eventually frame the understanding of chronic fatigue and patients with chronic fatigue.
Last edited by a moderator: