Webdog
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
It astonishes me this was written in 2019. No mention of ME/CFS biomedical research papers, but Elle magazine is cited. So there's that.
Chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, multiple chemical sensitivities, and chronic Lyme disease are all lumped together as "contested illnesses".
It's All in Your Head
The relationship between contested illnesses and psychiatric illnesses.
Sara Gorman, Ph.D., MPH, and Jack M. Gorman, MD
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/denying-the-grave/201906/its-all-in-your-head
There is a place to leave comments at the end of the article.
Edit: Title changed to show this was a blogger on the blog platform, and not strictly Psychology Today.
Chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, multiple chemical sensitivities, and chronic Lyme disease are all lumped together as "contested illnesses".
It's All in Your Head
The relationship between contested illnesses and psychiatric illnesses.
Sara Gorman, Ph.D., MPH, and Jack M. Gorman, MD
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/denying-the-grave/201906/its-all-in-your-head
Psychology Today blog platform said:Contested illnesses have uncertain causes, unclear treatments, and disputed medical, legal and cultural definitions.
Psychology Today blog platform said:These conditions are called “contested” because some people, including physicians and scientists, dispute their existence.
Psychology Today blog platform said:One of the things that many people with contested illnesses dislike is being told that their symptoms stem from an underlying psychiatric disorder.
Psychology Today blog platform said:Diagnosing Depression Seen as Insulting.
Psychology Today blog platform said:We do not know if contested illnesses like CFS, chronic Lyme disease, and fibromyalgia are in fact forms of psychiatric illness
Psychology Today blog platform said:It is time, then, to get over the fear that a psychiatric cause for an illness is somehow a dismissal of its “realness” or severity. Instead, we need to remember that psychiatric illnesses are themselves real and serious, even if they are mostly “all in the head.”
There is a place to leave comments at the end of the article.
Edit: Title changed to show this was a blogger on the blog platform, and not strictly Psychology Today.
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