Column (paywalled) by James Marriott in The Times.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/lets-end-the-stigma-of-psychosomatic-illness-whfdlwhph
Anyone know whether that 'a third of outpatients...' is right? Or where it's from? @dave30th perhaps?
I think the article shows what we're up against on this. I think Marriott is a decent guy and I generally like his columns. He is (like many journalists) an arts graduate. He reads about this subject as someone trying to be humane and understanding. The facts as presented seem convincing, he wants to be empathetic, so he buys the whole argument.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/lets-end-the-stigma-of-psychosomatic-illness-whfdlwhph
Recently we’ve accepted the idea that the suffering of mental illness, though different from a broken leg or a virus, is real. The next taboo is surely psychosomatic illness (or functional disorder, to use the term doctors prefer). These are the physical illnesses that do not show up in scans or tests, whose causes appear to be “all in the head” but whose symptoms can be severe and terrifying: seizures, fainting, terrible pain, paralysis — even blindness.
A third of outpatients in neurology and gastroenterology suffer from psychosomatic illnesses and it has been estimated that in the US they cost more to treat than diabetes. Treatments are often unsuccessful and many patients find themselves shunted from specialist to specialist in search of the one thing in modern medicine that will buy you respect: a label for a disease and proof of its biological cause...
Anyone know whether that 'a third of outpatients...' is right? Or where it's from? @dave30th perhaps?
I think the article shows what we're up against on this. I think Marriott is a decent guy and I generally like his columns. He is (like many journalists) an arts graduate. He reads about this subject as someone trying to be humane and understanding. The facts as presented seem convincing, he wants to be empathetic, so he buys the whole argument.