The problem is the Carson Stone bait and switch which goes:
They say it proves ME/CFS isn't all in your head.
Now of course if all in your head just means worry and overthinking then that would be true.
But lots of real psychiatric illnesses are all in your head, including of course mind-body problems such as worry and overthinking, perfectly treatable by our therapists.
and the straw man of using the caveat 'all' to excuse crowbarring in that whatever causes these things somehow we have to disprove Popper's theorem (can't prove a negative/absence)
'because what disabled person couldn't benefit from a bit of attitude training' seems to go down fine as long as the spoon of sugar wording is used to soften the message
followed by the lie that 'if that works for some...' then what's the issue with all the money going on that and us carrying on regardless
whilst of course at the same time them focusing on lowering the bar as to what level of evidence counts for 'works for some' or more importantly if any of the therapies everyone is having to empoeror's new clothes/don't mention the war really work much at all or just have made a living on dodgy methods. And of course that's when we get dragged into the bigger issue which is the dodgy behaviour of and regulation of the behavioural therapy industry (which because of its regs includes nhs)
The switch-and-bait seems to be the attitude of (which they used to push scientific psychology out of psychology and replace with iapt/behavioural) the old model of finding out what the cause is and matching the treatment to the cause should be replaced with a lowest common denominator 'that'll do because it is cheap' political solution to 'be seen to offer something' and then making/creating the 'evidence' to suggest when that doesn't work it isn't the 'treatment' but the person.
ie it comes down to their loose redefinitions/reframing of what terms like treatment, therapy, evidence or recovery/improvement are. All only possible as long as they keep it under the categorisation that frees them from the regulations that define those terms in eg drug trials and biomedical illness.
And whilst it is heaviest in ME/CFS and then the initiatives that have stemmed from the same groups the target aim I think has always been to categorise all 'chronic illness' this way, you can feel it for the last decade in the health system that cfs was the label but it was about face fits and the nonsense that other conditions that do have treatments were ruled out was never seen as necessary by most.
Diagnosis into specific pathways that do exist for certain serious illnesses that are technically chronic is a bit of a thorn in the side already. To find a new one, particularly as people keep wanting to connect it to the flagship one of long covid, crossing over that invisible policy-line is I think being sold (by those selling the 'claimed cheap at any cost' therapy for chronic illness) as the Rubicon.
Except quite a lot of those who are caught up by this seem to be happy to keep up the Truman Show because of that misnomer 'that there must be a good reason for it because they are good people'. Hence why the veiling some pretty not-nice stuff in the 'only because we care' trojan horse etiquette.
The mad patients label and slowly brainwashing even medical professionals and laypersons to see certain physical symptoms as now redefined as 'see it think mental health' has been the key initiative of the last 5yrs. BUt yes they don't mean the real department that used to exist but I suspect is suffering from the same initiatives but the behavioural retraining 'new service' politically sold to dump diseases like addiction, anxiety, eating disorders 'to be managed' (out) and treated as 'societal issues' rather than proper scientific medicine, with their eye on things like autism sadly too despite the evidence sitting that one firmly in a different place years ago. It's about rationing and/or the other side of the coin of a market to 'deal with' the leftovers and stop them being a problem.