I'll not comment on my collection of hats, nor of making fun of my dad's collection when I was a teenager.
I agree. I think that examples of current noticeboards, patient info and questionnaires would be brilliant. I think we need to gather them before the CFS clinics are switched to MUS.
I think there are some pretty good quotes out there that could be used to hammer home the point that patients are being misled or worse. I'm thinking of an A4 notice at one specialist that a friend of mine recently saw saying words to the effect that people with ME went to the bottom of the list.
The problem would be one of information overkill. So what we would need is a selective quote or two from as many different ME centres as we can possibly manage in the time we have. They wouldn't have to be too current, as nothing has changed in the guidelines, and nothing has officially been recognized since PACE.
The aim would not be to get rid of CBT and GET – the push for evidence-based decisions should do that. The aim would be to show NICE that their gently-phrased statements about "the reality and impact of the condition", "shared decision-making", "offer information about local and national self-help groups and support groups" (most seem to be dead against this), "provide accurate information", offer "assistance with occupational activities including work and education", and, above all "there is no known pharmacological treatment or cure for CFS/ME", which seems to be taken to mean no pharmacological cure, rather than no cure.
The reason most specialists and centres are against self-help centres seems to be a study or two that report that members of such groups show less improvement, and that the usual psychs keep banging on about it. There are two perfectly sensible reasons why it is probably true that they show less improvement. The first is that all such improvement seems to be subjectively assessed: I know they used membership of self-help groups as a possible factor in the PACE trial, but I can't remember whether it had any effect on objective measure (I'll have a look later).
The second is that there is normally a long wait to attend the ME centres, and if, in that time, people have joined self-help or support groups, they are likely to have started to get to grips with beating the boom and bust cycle, and starting to understand the nature of the condition (as much as any of us ever do). So when they actually get to the centres, there is less that the centres can actually offer them.