adambeyoncelowe
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I should add, they joked that they weren't used to getting praise. I think they know the consequences of getting it wrong.
The IAPT programme will shift increasing numbers of long term patients into cheap therapies and enable the selling off of profitable services post BrexitI get the impression there is no real evidence base. I've seen PACE results be quoted by them (but without attribution). I think they do claim an evidence base but never seem to point to anything anyone would think was reliable but rather they seem to believe that if they chant 'evidence based treatments' 10 times every morning then that is sufficient.
I'm thinking the whole IAPT programme is a con and they will be found out when it doesn't deliver results.
From previous studies they always do when you carefully pick your parameters....She is a paediatric physio.
She also said that they had just finished the Magenta trial and the results looked good!!
It is so sad - the huge margin by which they simply do not get it.Well, UCLH run their paediatric CFS (never call it or diagnose anyone with ME) as MUS/CFS. Here’s a picture from the waiting room.
Being labelled with something else and/or dumped is actually the better option. You can also get accused of not engaging, not following what they say (they control every minute of the day and night) and therefore stopping your child from getting better (never mind that the current guidelines say that you can withdraw from any aspect of the ‘treatment/management’). That can obviously lead to more sinister things like child protection.It is so sad - the huge margin by which they simply do not get it.
It would be interesting to see some stats from here- is it like Bath where if you fail to improve you are simply labelled with something else and dumped?
I fear for children being " cared for" in places like this
This illustrates the benefits of not having "experts" - when first diagnosed i was angry, now on reflection, it would simply have made things a lot worse.Being labelled with something else and/or dumped is actually the better option. You can also get accused of not engaging, not following what they say (they control every minute of the day and night) and therefore stopping your child from getting better (never mind that the current guidelines say that you can withdraw from any aspect of the ‘treatment/management’). That can obviously lead to more sinister things like child protection.
The IAPT programme will shift increasing numbers of long term patients into cheap therapies and enable the selling off of profitable services post Brexit
There is no evidence base, the drive is political
I would be interested to know what the evidence base for therapist-delivered treatments for MUS is - if there is any. My impression has been that PACE and the GET meta-analysis for ME have been taken as the bedrock evidence from which to extrapolate. If we can get to the point where it is agreed by NICE that this evidence is not there then the MUS programme will be out in the cold in terms of its own guidelines. There are other political forces at work in the NHS, like IAPT, but much of the programme is driven by academic doctors wanting to build psychosomatic empires through pseudo research. If it becomes clear how pseudo this is for ME maybe it will dent the bigger program.
I think this type of scenario with CBT/GET/activity management lite is very dangerous for us. I suspect this is what they want to do, easy option for NICE and keeps the psychs control of the disease in a different format.
So I think it is absolutely critical to get the biomedical basis of ME cast in stone in the new guidelines so that they emphatically can't subsume us in MUS, that to me is paramount.
So I think it is absolutely critical to get the biomedical basis of ME cast in stone in the new guidelines so that they emphatically can't subsume us in MUS, that to me is paramount.
I think this is precisely what will happenAs much as I like Prof Chris Ponting and am very pleased that he is working on the T cell clonal expansion, his reasonable comment about 'the M.E. spectrum' and how eventually causes may be revealed for some, filled me with dread. It is very easy to imagine the idea of a spectrum solidifying into a 'divide and conquer' scenario:
'yes, there are some people with a real, predominantly biomedical, illness that exciting research will identify a biomarker for. And the rest with their false illness beliefs can be lumped in with all the other people with imaginary illnesses and can continue to be looked after by the existing clinics and encouraged to have GET and CBT.
Oh, and until there are biomarkers, the subset of people assumed to have the biomedical illness will consist of the clearly non-hysterical; that is the educated adult males (and the occasional educated adult female) who have never been depressed or anxious.
So, there are enough patients and funds for everyone! No need for awkward arguments about who is right and who is wrong, and no need to drastically change anything much at all.'
I think we should all try and get on the same page as @Jonathan Edwards suggests.
The trouble with that is that it may lead to the idea that they should be 'inclusive' and allow lots of different options, even if with a weak evidence base. That of course allows the psychiatrists right back in (having never actually left) and we are back to square one. My position has been that the only way to keep unproven and troublesome treatments out of the picture is to stick to the normal NICE policy of requiring a good evidence base.
And that makes it hard to have a 'biomedical basis cast in stone' because it isn't cast in any stone in the literature. We cannot say to NICE 'we have decided that ME is biomedical and you have to agree'. All we can say is that there is no evidence that the psychiatrists either have any coherent theories or trial based evidence for their approach being of any value. In a court of law the relatives are not allowed to tell the judge that the defendant has to be acquitted because they say so. The judge has to decide on evidence. The problem we have is that the psychiatry people have been doing this. If we use the same tactic we have a very weak position.
I dont know why more people cant see that the position of "well such n such supplement/off label drug helps some people, so lets have it".... is simply the BPS argument in the opposite direction.
I proposed that despite seeing this. The thought was that if NICE is unwilling to say that patients should receive no treatment, then we could at least get them to recommend some fairly harmless supplements over potentially dangerous GET. It's a political move.
But I agree it makes us look like hypocrites if at the same we insist on having CBT/GET removed on the basis that there is no solid evidence. We would have to also play the "surveys consistently show harm" card.
In the end the question seems to boil down to how patients should be treated when they have chronic symptoms that cannot be attributed to a known disease. Current thought is to assume a psychological disorder and treat accordingly.
And did you see how they compare mild CFS to Mus headaches !
I think a compilation of noticeboards across the country would be quite powerful for the next NICE meeting to show what a shambles the whole thing is in terms of inconsistency etc ?
Thank you @Alena Lerari for showing this. (And welcome aboard ...I’m looking forward to your next posts)
There's still symptoms relief (pain an sleep mainly).But enough of these thought experiments. It is not a good idea to squander our credibility by recommending unproven treatments and the likely outcome is that NICE will not remove CBT/GET from the recommendations but instead add these other unproven treatments.
So let's do this instead: get NICE guidelines to mirror this document https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fped.2017.00121/full
and get them to admit that there is no evidence for any treatment.