Caroline Struthers
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Will do one asaphttps://www.bmj.com/content/371/bmj.m4356/rapid-responses
Just one response so far, from an Indian doctor: sympathetic, but doesn't say much of substance
Will do one asaphttps://www.bmj.com/content/371/bmj.m4356/rapid-responses
Just one response so far, from an Indian doctor: sympathetic, but doesn't say much of substance
Survey alert: Share your views on #MECFS #draftNICEguidline #pwme
Open to #pwme #carers of all ages; we've simplified/summarised as far as possible
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Deadline Mon 14 Dec 2020. Thank you!
https://twitter.com/actionforme/status/1327293439097102336
Another thought: where the guideline references ME/CFS as a "serious illness" would it be unreasonable to suggest that it specifies it as a "serious PHYSICAL illness"? I understand that 'serious illness' should be adequate for most conditions but given our history with those who try to psychologize our illness maybe this emphasis on physical illness is warranted.
I do appreciate your sentiment here, but I think that would just open the door for the BPS crew to fire back at us "Well OK, explain it to us then." The simple truth is that ME/CFS is medically unexplained in many ways. The problem with MUS is the presumption that anything medically unexplained must be psychiatric, which is complete "bullocks". But because of the deliberate ambiguity, any suggestion of saying ME/CFS is not MUS, will be deliberately twisted to make it sound like we are asserting ME/CFS is not medically unexplained, which is readily disprovable with the current level of research. Cans of worms and quagmires come to mind, and I think far better to stay clear of, lest we seriously undermine our credibility.This may have already been mentioned here but could we ask that the guideline explicitly state that ME/CFS is not MUS? Can this guideline be used to close those doors that we know the BPS brigade will try to use to sneak in through the back?
In Energy Management, 1.11.2 we have:Okay, but we can say that it doesn't have a psychosocial cause and theories of symptom focusing, false illness beliefs, etc have no validity?
In Physical Activity, 1.11.16 we have:Explain that it:
...
does not assume that deconditioning is the cause of ME/CFS
The BPS deconditioning model revolves around pwME being deconditioned. Without the deconditioning bit then the false illness beliefs, symptom focussing, etc fall apart anyway. I'm not sure if a NICE guideline needs to - or even should - go further than that.Do not offer people with ME/CFS:
...
structured activity or exercise programmes that are based on deconditioning as the cause of ME/CFS
This is a concern for me too. They are just going to change labels, and of course have been doing so for some time. Then they can innocently say that they have not diagnosed the patient with ME, but with MUS/health anxiety/whatever, therefore the guidelines for ME don't apply. Or at least that such diagnoses are in addition to ME, and they are only treating for those labels, not for ME.This may have already been mentioned here but could we ask that the guideline explicitly state that ME/CFS is not MUS? Can this guideline be used to close those doors that we know the BPS brigade will try to use to sneak in through the back?
I'm glad the guideline is explicit against the deconditioning / false illness beliefs theory. (I was very releived to read this, and enjoyed imagining having those key sentences tattooed onto my body)
But, i noticed about a year ago various medics i have had to see seemed to stop talking about deconditioning/fib and started up on this new thing of an "over sensitised system"... I was to calm my CNS, meditate, stop focusing on my symptoms, breathe (?!), exercise, sleep hygene etc... and my "cfs" would get better... At the time i just assumed they could see where the wind was blowing with the deconditioning/false illness beliefs thing and were trying to find another way to justify giving the same nonsense. To me, it was just the same "cure" that looked the same as it always does, but with a new underlying theory.
I worry, as i don't think the new draft guideline would stop clinics doing this, because the NICE guidline is specific about it only being against "therapies" based on deconditioning, not therapies based on this new over sensitised central nervous system.
“Adam Gaffney is a physician, writer, public health researcher, and advocate. He practices pulmonary and critical care medicine at the Cambridge Health Alliance and is an Instructor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School. His research focuses on healthcare financing, reform, and equity, and disparities in lung health. He writes about the policy, politics, and history of health care. He serves as President of Physicians for a National Health Program, a non-profit organization that advocates for Medicare-for-All healthcare reform. He is on twitter @awgaffney.”
There was a time when nobody associated with Harvard would make themselves look as ill-informed as that.
Times have changed.
The way Action for ME influenced that Guardian article was not helpful. I hope that they realise this.
If I could be bothered, I'd be asking all of these 'medical experts' if they are arguing that we shouldn't believe in the recommendations from all NICE guidelines, given that they are arguing that the review process isn't valid in this particular case. And if they are arguing that it is only this guideline review process that shouldn't be trusted, what about the process was incorrect and why should we have trusted it before?