Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Where did Jon Stone pop up from I wonder? It seems that Edinburgh neurology wants to get in on the act but why tag along with this little whine?
But debate involves two sides arguing, if one loses their mind it undermines their own credibility which is a good thing. I'm glad your on our side but most docs don't go hunting for the minutiae of obscure diseases they rarely enounter, they digest what they read from "informed" sources.I doubt it. Sharpe and Chalder are just saying 'Not fair you meanies. I am going to tell my daddy on you!' without raising a hint of a rational argument.
But debate involves two sides arguing, if one loses their mind it undermines their own credibility which is a good thing. I'm glad your on our side but most docs don't go hunting for the minutiae of obscure diseases they rarely enounter, they digest what they read from "informed" sources.
Looking dodgy is not enough, it needs quashing yesterday.Nature has said CBT and GET are looking dodgy to the people that matter.
Sorry if this sounds preachy and i don't mean to attack you personally.
We did get off topic but i would support a reply, anyone who comes across their statements and doesn't know better would be exposed to facts instead of sham opinions presented as real.I cannot quite see what it has to do with the thread. An own goal from the other side is better than nothing as far as I can see. As I see it a further response to something so pathetic would just look like a pantomime 'no it isn't, yes it is'. Like awarding the own gaolers a free penalty kick.
They bring in Jon Stone, whoever he may be.
They bring in Jon Stone, whoever he may be.
iredness is a very common symptom in patients with functional neurological symptoms.
Often despite many more obvious symptoms, people say that it is the tiredness and fatigue that really holds them back day to day.
Tiredness in this situation can also be thought of as another symptom related to a problem with nervous system functioning.
When tiredness like this occurs
• with no other neurological symptoms
• for more than 6 months
• not due to a detectable underlying medical or neurological condition
then it is called Chronic Fatigue Syndrome / M.E. (CFS/ME)
CFS/ME has been recognised as a genuine illness by the Chief Medical Officers in England/Wales and Scotland (link)
This website is not designed to discuss chronic fatigue syndrome / M.E. in detail
Fatigue may occur as part of anxiety or depression, although its important to say that you don’t need to be anxious or depressed to have persistent and severe fatigue
However, many of the principles of treating CFS/ME which have been proven to be effective in clinical trials are likely to be effective in patients with functional neurological symptoms
There are some useful resources for patients with this diagnosis. If you want to try to understand more about this or learn practical ways to manage your fatigue then I can recommend the following book available online:
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS/ME) (The Facts) by Frankie Campling, Michael Sharpe. Oxford University Press
Ahah, seing "compassionate" in relation with Sharpe is quite a joke. Saying he's writing from the patient's perspective is probably a touch of that famous British humour.Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: The Facts presents a compassionate guide to this illness, providing sufferers and their families, with practical advice, based solely on scientific evidence. It is unique in being written by both a sufferer and a physician, both of whom have had extensive experience of talking to, and helping, patients. Included in the book is a detailed guide to self-help, written from a patient's perspective, but evidence-based. The book also deals with a number of special issues, advising on how to choose therapies and therapists, and how to deal with CFS in children. The book additionally includes an overview of the history of the illness, looking at the nature and causes of CFS, and the opportunities for the future. The book will be invaluable for sufferers from CFS, their friends and families, and the numerous health professionals who come into contact with sufferers from this illness.
iredness is a very common symptom in patients with functional neurological symptoms.
Michael Sharpe didn't declare all his COIs though, did he?
Amy is very welcome to lurk.Amy says she may lurk here for a bit. I said she was welcome.
Aside from the results of the PACE trial you mention (co-authored by two of us, T.C. and M.S., among others), further scientific evidence supports the effectiveness of interventions such as exercise and CBT (see, for example, L. Larun et al. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. http://doi.org/cjp6; 2017 and J. R. Price et al. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev.http://doi.org/dcs37d; 2008).
I doubt it. Sharpe and Chalder are just saying 'Not fair you meanies. I am going to tell my daddy on you!'
In our view, there is no place for stigmatizing any avenue of research or therapy that might help us to improve the lives of people with this long-term debilitating illness.
They now resort to citing small studies to back the PACE trial
According to Google he was creator of the Muppets.
I think that's because this isn't just about PACE but also about other commonly held views concerning various "medically unexplained symptoms" and mental illnesses.