Fatigue, Physical Activity, and Mental Health in People Living With Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Fibromyalgia, & in Healthy Controls, 2020, Olive et al

Andy

Retired committee member
This study aimed to identify biopsychosocial factors associated with fatigue, physical activity, and perceived benefits of and barriers to exercise in adults with inflammatory bowel disease and to compare them with those with fibromyalgia and healthy controls. A cross-sectional online survey was conducted. Hierarchical linear regressions were used to examine correlates of fatigue and physical activity. Analysis of variance and Kruskal–Wallis tests were used to compare levels of fatigue and physical activity between the groups.

Overall, 387 participants completed the study (inflammatory bowel disease: n = 232; fibromyalgia: n = 102; healthy controls: n = 53). Significant correlates of fatigue included pain catastrophizing (p = .006), sleep quality (p = .003), and depressive symptoms (p < .001). Perceived barriers to exercise were associated with depressive symptoms (p = .003). Correlates of perceived benefits of exercise included anxiety (p = .036), depressive symptoms (p = .014), coping (positive reframing) (p = .018), and social support (from family) (p = .033). The fibromyalgia group had the greatest fatigue interference and the lowest score for physical activity, followed by the inflammatory bowel disease group and healthy controls (p < .05).

Given the interplay between depressive symptoms, fatigue, and benefits/barriers to exercise, there is a need for more psychological interventions to be developed and tested in order to reduce fatigue and increase physical activity to better manage disease-related outcomes.
Paywall, https://journals.lww.com/gastroente...hysical_Activity,_and_Mental_Health_in.7.aspx
Not available via Sci hub at time of posting.
 
We should take note they are going after not IBS, but IBD - aka Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis, which are not remotely 'functional' or 'MUS'.

I tend to conflate IBS and IBD when skimming through things so I'm pointing it out in case that happens to anybody else.
 
We should take note they are going after not IBS, but IBD - aka Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis, which are not remotely 'functional' or 'MUS'.

I tend to conflate IBS and IBD when skimming through things so I'm pointing it out in case that happens to anybody else.


Thank you for pointing this out, @James Morris-Lent. I noticed that too, and it's concerning IBD would be portrayed as a psychological problem. IBD has proven biomedical tests and treatments. It's my understanding this disease is autoimmune.

Perhaps a test for some diseases, as to whether they're psychosomatic or not in humans, is to look at the animal world. Animals develop IBD. Maybe these animals have lounged around, been slothful with no exercise, and worried themselves sick too.;):banghead:
 
Interesting how double speak works. They were aiming to identify bioopsychosocial factors. But that is all factors - bio, psycho and social - yet they only looked at the psycho. So biopsychsocial actually means psychological.

This has always been the case with BPS researchers and what has helped them have credibility in the minds of those who don't bother to look further into it and they assume patients are getting assessed/treatments based on the bio side too. Of course it is all well thought out, done this way very much on purpose.
 
Perhaps a test for some diseases, as to whether they're psychosomatic or not in humans, is to look at the animal world. Animals develop IBD. Maybe these animals have lounged around, been slothful with no exercise, and worried themselves sick too.;):banghead:

Well, that may not suit either. from my experience when an animal has a behaviour or mood change the vets first do a thorough physical.

If you want to book an assessment with a good dog behaviourist about a developing behaviour issue they usually insist on a thorough physical check up by the vet first. Many behavioural problems have underlying and/or chronic pain or an intolerance to certain food as root causes.

So, while vets take an interest in an animals mood the assumption is that changes to behaviour or mood are usually physical in origin.

BPSers wouldn't want to be exposed to that type of thinking.
 
Ah, it's the ole Chalder script, the empire-building is spreading. Always the same ending. And intent. And set of questionnaires. And outcome-seeking analysis. Doing the same thing over and over and ensuring the same results. No matter the circumstances, the outcome is always the same. It's more like performance art. Except people suffer and die. So, very bad performance art. Or extremely good, I guess, depends on one's role in the performance.
there is a need for more psychological interventions to be developed and tested in order to reduce fatigue
The absurdity of this sentence is amazing. Right up there with the memory of water. Do they even hear themselves talk? Let's align chakras while we're here. How about a good colonic cleanse to optimize your mindfulness?

I think there is a need to reframe BPS evidence-based medicine as questionnaire-based... something. Medicine doesn't apply here, it has nothing to do with what the patients need or anything relevant to medicine other than it involves sick people, though frankly unclear why as it's basically magazine quiz level of psychology that just connects boxes to one another because they want those boxes to align.
 
Yes @Invisible Woman, many vets do physicals first. Not so in some serious biomedical cases I am aware of. Jumping right to a psychological cause, led to increased physical debility.

Oh no! I've been lucky then. On every single occasion my vets and dog trainers have gone done the physical health path first. They've been right every time.

They didn't ignore psychological wellbeing - when one dog was very sick and in hospital for a week they allowed us in for a visit when the surgery closed every evening to keep his spirits up. They felt that helped his recovery.

I'm very, very picky about vets and trainers though, in a way I can't be about doctors, sadly.
 
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