Melanie
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
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But what is "good clinical care"? My healthcare provider says it is "anti-depressants, regular exercise, and supportive counseling" (for someone with no comorbid psych diagnosis). Other than the warnings about triggering PEM, I see nothing so far that would make my healthcare provider change its treatment policy.CDC said:Patients benefit from talking with their healthcare providers about potential therapies, including the risks and expense of unproven treatments. Patients also benefit from thorough medical evaluations and good clinical care.
CDC said:Because ME/CFS is a complicated illness, its management may require input from a variety of medical professionals. Primary care providers can develop effective treatment plans. When expertise is available and accessible, these plans can sometimes be enhanced through collaboration with clinical specialists and a team of other health care professionals such as rehabilitation specialists, mental health professionals, and physical therapists.
This is a bolded in the original. This is close to my goal. I've always told doctors I want to improve functioning and quality of life. Symptom reduction is less important to me, except when symptoms significantly interfere with functioning and quality of life.CDC said:Helping patients get relief from symptoms and achieve improvement in quality of life are the main goals of treatment.
This sounds pretty good on the surface, so long as doctors understand that progress may not be achievable. In practice, healthcare providers strive for consistent uniform treatment which they roll out across the organization. Providers don't do well with nebulous "individualized treatment programs", unless one has very good insurance.CDC said:To care for patients with ME/CFS, healthcare providers experienced in managing this illness typically develop an individualized treatment plan as a team effort between patients and their providers, as well as caregivers and loved ones. This individualized treatment program that best meets the needs of the patient is re-evaluated periodically based on each patient’s progress. Each patient’s program typically includes a combination of:
- Therapies to address symptoms
- Techniques to help patients cope
- Strategies to manage daily activities
No mention of the 25% longterm homebound or bedbound and their needs and ability to interact with the healthcare system.
No mention of the 25% longterm homebound or bedbound and their inability to interact with the healthcare system. That is very sad, no acknowledgment of the sickest amongst us, just ignored.
I spoke too soon. Farther down on another page there is a severe section.No mention of the 25% longterm homebound or bedbound and their inability to interact with the healthcare system. That is very sad, no acknowledgment of the sickest amongst us, just ignored.
CDC said:A subgroup of ME/CFS patients is affected severely and can be house-bound or even bedbound for weeks or longer. Very severely affected patients experience profound weakness, almost constant pain, severe limitations to physical and mental activity, sensory hypersensitivity (light, touch, sound, smell, and certain foods), and hypersensitivity to medications.
These patients often cannot make office visits, and require in-home assistance and management plans specifically adjusted to their needs. Caregivers, who provide ongoing management and the majority of care for patients, are subject to substantial stress and may need additional support.
Any odds that critiques will pretty much fall along party lines, ie, US residents will be harder on the revisions, UK and many other European countries and Canada more pleased?
I wish they would just come out and say most pwME do not improve. They continue to equivocate and hedge. I think this does more damage than good.
The "Clinical Care" section is so nonspecific.
But what is "good clinical care"? My healthcare provider says it is "anti-depressants, regular exercise, and supportive counseling" (for someone with no comorbid psych diagnosis). Other than the warnings about triggering PEM, I see nothing so far that would make my healthcare provider change its treatment policy.
Managed healthcare providers don't typically try unproven treatments. 100 million Americans are covered by managed health plans. I see nothing here that would make a provider want to try say low-dose naltrexone or antivirals.
The CDC emphasizes self-management, but If you click the "self-management link", it goes to an AHRQ page which says "Self management support includes the following:" "Making referrals to community-based resources, such as programs that help patients quit smoking or follow an exercise plan".
This is the specialist care my healthcare provider offered to me in a recent letter. A physical therapist and a psychiatrist. The CDC seems to support this is appropriate care.
On the plus side, it may no longer be acceptable for my healthcare provider to completely ignore pacing. Not one doctor has ever mentioned activity management or pacing to me.
Major healthcare providers often won't touch treatments for which there isn't strong evidence. (Then again, they throw antidepressants at patients like candy.)Big entities like CDC get in trouble for recommending treatments for which there is little evidence -- and by "little evidence" I mean not a full-scale, double-blind, placebo-controlled study.
MORE BIOMED RESEARCH FUNDING PLS.
Yes, yes they do.(Then again, they throw antidepressants at patients like candy.)
Major healthcare providers often won't touch treatments for which there isn't strong evidence. (Then again, they throw antidepressants at patients like candy.)
It would have been nice if the CDC would have incorporated more of the treatment recommendations from the recent expert clinician summit. Perhaps a mention of Low-Dose Naltrexone or antivirals?
Kaiser Permanente has a large research division, which often studies diseases that already have effective treatments. But when I try to get them to consider studying ME/CFS, they show zero interest.
This document was already more than 6 months past the promised delivery date. But I suppose I shouldn't look a gift horse in the mouth... it is overall a vast improvement.- fwiw - the lag time between CDC developing (any) material and it being approved and posted is really lengthy so while it would have been nice to have more of the recommendations from the clinician summit, we'd be waiting a lot longer for that material.....