Crossposted with
@Sarah. I agree with the points made.
________
I agree that the emphasis on only being against inflexible programs is unevidenced and wrong.
I also think the opening sentence of the GET section:
The ME Association is not and never has been against exercise per se.
sets the tone wrongly, sounds defensive - as if we can only criticise GET if we provide some other type of exercise program that would be acceptable. It seems to imply that 'exercise' does have its place in 'treatment'. There is no evidence for this. I don't understand why, in a section on GET, the MEA would be mounting a defence of exercise having a place in ME/CFS treatment. There is NO evidence for this.
Reading it reminded me very much of the new draft NICE guideline, in that it means well and is heading in the right direction, but makes some of the mistakes we pointed out in our submission to the guideline review.
Take these paragraphs:
The
ME Association article says:
The ME Association is not and never has been against exercise per se. What we have consistently been saying since publication of the current NICE guideline (2007) and the PACE Trial (2011), is that use of regimented and inflexible graded exercise therapy as a management approach for people with ME/CFS is wrong, ineffective, and can cause harm.
[...]
For some people, depending on their current state of health and functional ability, exercise can be carefully introduced as part of activity management or pacing, so long as the individual can accommodate an increase in physical activity and it does not lead to an exacerbation or relapse of ME/CFS symptoms.
Draft
NICE guideline says on page 27:
Physical activity
1.11.15 Do not advise people with ME/CFS to undertake unstructured exercise that is not part of a supervised programme, such as telling them to go to the gym or exercise more, because this may worsen their symptoms.
1.11.16 Do not offer people with ME/CFS:
• any therapy based on physical activity or exercise as a treatment
or cure for ME/CFS
• generalised physical activity or exercise programmes – this includes programmes developed for healthy people or people with other illnesses
• any programme based on fixed incremental increases in physical activity or exercise, for example graded exercise therapy
• structured activity or exercise programmes that are based on deconditioning as the cause of ME/CFS
• therapies derived from osteopathy, life coaching and neurolinguistic programming (for example the Lightning Process).
1.11.17 Only consider a physical activity programme for people with ME/CFS who are ready to progress their physical activity beyond their current activities of daily living, or would like to incorporate physical activity into the management of their ME/CFS.
1.11.18 A physical activity programme, if offered, should only be delivered or overseen by a physiotherapist or occupational therapist with training and expertise in ME/CFS.
1.11.19 Tell people about the risks and benefits of a physical activity programme. Explain that some people with ME/CFS have found that physical activity programmes can make their symptoms worsen, for some people it makes no difference and others find them helpful.
1.11.20 If a physical activity programme is agreed with the person with ME/CFS, it should be personalised and should:
• establish their physical activity baseline at a level that does not worsen their symptoms
• start by reducing the person’s activity to within their energy envelope 2• be possible to maintain it successfully before attempting to increase 29 physical ability
• use flexible increments for people who want to focus on improving their physical abilities while remaining within their energy envelope
• recognise a flare or relapse early and outline how to manage it (see 4 recommendations 1.11.21 and 1.11.22)
• incorporate regular reviews.
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/gid-ng10091/documents/draft-guideline
The
S4ME submission includes this:
Physical activity programmes for those whose symptoms have improved, and CBT for psychological support, are neither evidence based, nor necessary. We recommend they be removed from the guideline, where their inclusion presents a real risk of harm, with GET and directive CBT continuing to be provided under different names.
https://www.s4me.info/threads/scien...consultation-december-2020.18281/#post-311598
and
S4ME said this:
There is likewise no reliable evidence to support the recommendations for physical activity programmes for some people with ME/CFS, or to suggest that increasing by flexible increments while remaining within a person's 'energy envelope' is feasible as a concept, has benefits (as suggested at 1.11.19) or is safe. The recommendations in the subsection on 'Physical activity' present a form of graded exercise therapy, for which the evidence review established, there is no reliable evidence. The portrayal in the guideline of activity programmes involving fixed increments as being poorly evidence and potentially harmful, and programmes involving flexible increments as acceptable and potentially beneficial is a false distinction, since it is clear that clinical studies of GET included in the effectiveness review did include non-fixed increments.
There is no reliable evidence that people with ME/CFS who find their energy levels have improved would benefit from input from HCPs, with the possible exception of those transitioning from being bedbound to greater levels of mobility, for whom the recommendations under physical maintenance may be helpful alongside general advice and supervision from a physiotherapist with up-to-date ME/CFS training consistent with this guideline. Our members generally report being able to increase activity levels naturally without need of HCP input when they have experienced improvements in health. Such a 'hands-off' approach has the benefit of entailing no cost to the health system.
https://www.s4me.info/threads/scien...consultation-december-2020.18281/#post-311625
as part of our general comments on the whole guideline, as well as detailed criticisms and suggestions for a rewrite of the Physical activity management section:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/scien...consultation-december-2020.18281/#post-311610
Taking couple more paragraphs:
The
MEA said:
The ME Association has not encountered anyone with ME/CFS who has not tried to push against their limits from time to time, when they think they can, or when circumstances allow or dictate. However, exercise is not a panacea or proven means of recovery. Indeed, exercise is contra-indicated for many who are still struggling to achieve basic daily functions.
Cautious trial and error can be a way of learning we can do more – or that we should be sticking where we are, or even doing less. It is natural to try and push and to fight to get back to work or education as part of our efforts to return to ‘normal’ life especially while we are wrestling with acceptance.
Nobody wants to remain housebound or bedbound or limited by ill-health and having to depend on the support of others. This isn’t about a lack of positive mental attitude or avoidance based on fear. It is about realistic expectations and trying to prevent further harm.
People with ME/CFS and Long Covid will often learn the hard way about how much they can endure at any particular time and the rest they need to compensate. Health professionals should listen to their patients, learn from their experiences, and tailor management to be realistic to that person’s abilities. They should be flexible in their approach and should not apply the same approach to everyone or believe that continued disability is a result of deconditioning and that exercise is the answer.
I appreciate the emphasis that it is not a psychological fear of activity that is holding us back, and that we naturally try pushing to see if we can do a bit more. I'm not keen on the phrase 'how much they can endure' as that has psychological overtones. As in 'are you mentally tough enough'.
I don't like the 'individually tailored' approach by professionals angle. It sounds too much like the therapists who claim to be able to design individualised therapies for pwME. There is no evidence for this.
In our NICE submission we recommended the whole management section be geared around the concept of patient-led symptom-contingent pacing. So the professional's input is in helping patients understand that concept and strategies for implementing it for themselves, not for the therapist to be designing the activity program, whether individualised or not. And certainly not for the therapist offering physical activity programs of any sort even if patients' are going through a stable or improved phase in their symptoms. Sticking with symptom-contingent pacing allows for natural increases when symptoms allow, without the need for therapist led programs.
The
MEA said:
With appropriate convalescence and careful management, it is possible for an individual to experience more stability in symptom severity and fluctuations. They might even show signs of improved functional ability allowing greater – if still limited – freedoms.
Understanding the principles of PEM can allow more activity and less need to rest as an individual’s ‘energy envelope’ expands. But health professionals need to recognise that this is not true of everyone’s experience.
For many with ME/CFS, increasing the ability to carry out daily activities such as dressing, improving personal hygiene, preparing meals, and becoming more independent etc. will be necessary priorities before any other activity is even contemplated.
If an individual no longer has PEM then they should review their ME/CFS diagnosis with a doctor. It is not clear of the extent to which PEM is a key component of Long Covid, although from the feedback we have received it would seem to be part of the symptom presentation for a lot of people.
I think this is OK in the context of people with early stages of ME/CFS and/or PVFS or long covid. It is true that many people recover from PVFS and probably from long Covid, so it's fine to suggest and improving and possible recovery pattern in those early stages. But I would prefer that context to be spelled out more clearly, so the likes of Paul Garner whose relatively short phase of a few months of PEM went away after careful pacing and rest, and he no longer fitted the ME/CFS definition, that diagnosis can be removed without attributing the recovery to whatever therapy they tried as they were starting to get better anyway.
But for those of us who have had ME/CFS for many years, this paragraph seems to place too much emphasis on a recovery phase following a period of convalescence and pacing.
Understanding the principles of PEM can allow more activity and less need to rest as an individual’s ‘energy envelope’ expands. But health professionals need to recognise that this is not true of everyone’s experience.
It sounds too much like the GET manual that gets people to 'find their baseline' and then start increasing activity. I don't think it's enough to say that it's not true for everyone. That too easily leaves us blaming ourselves for not trying hard enough to get pacing right - making it our fault if we fail to reach that lovely path to improvement.
@Russell Fleming, I appreciate the effort and intention of this article, but I am very concerned that it's approach to recommending therapist led individualised programs that include flexible increases in activity and exercise programs is not based on any scientific evidence. Why not focus instead on the fact that there is NO evidence that any sort of exercise has been shown to improve or lead to recovery in ME/CFS, nor that there is any place for the provision of such by the NHS.
I think the emphasis needs to sit firmly with convalescence, and symptom contingent pacing, with any increases in activity being solely determined on the basis of trying to avoid worsening by causing PEM and longer term setbacks. Exercise comes naturally if and when people are lucky enough to improve significantly or recover, not as part of a treatment regime.
I also think it would be worth spelling out in a document that is intended to cover long term ME/CFS, short term PVFS and long Covid that may or may not develop into long term ME/CFS, that many people with PVFS recover naturally without treatment, and that the same is likely to be true for longCovid, so to be wary of claims that any particular approach 'cured' any individual who was likely recovering anyway.