cassava7
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Perhaps I should submit the following, sarcastic letter
Dear Sir/Madam,
We read with great interest the manuscript by Hall et al. on strategies for patients with medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) to avoid therapeutic nihilism in their healthcare providers. Based on our experience, however, we advise restricting the exposure to MUS patients to a bare minimum. These patients rarely have identifiable pathology, usually don’t get better and their diagnostic consultations can be extremely boring. Given the high rate of burnout among doctors and nurses, it would be bad practice to expose our medical professionals to these heart-sink patients.
To reduce the burden of MUS on the healthcare system we have developed a brief cognitive-behavioral intervention named SHUT-IT (no acronym). It teaches MUS patients to transcendent the suffering induced by their symptoms by focusing on positive aspects of being unwell. Patients are instructed to provide upbeat narratives focusing on willpower, perseverance, and spirituality as means to overcome illness and misfortune. SHUT-IT stresses ‘moving in stillness’, where MUS patients strive to be less burdensome to the productive members of society. Linguistic reprogramming is used to reduce catastrophizing, symptom-focusing, and somatic attributions and encourage patients to say they are doing somewhat better.
We piloted a randomized trial of SHUT-IT in which 15 clinicians were exposed to MUS patients of different degrees of dreadfulness. Satistically significant improvements were seen on a standardized boringness scale. Descriptive terms for MUS consultations shifted from ‘depressing’ and ‘frustrating’ to ‘inspiring’, ‘cute’, and ‘uplifting’. 86 percent of participants indicated they were happy to tell MUS patients to SHUT-IT and some even indicated they were already using techniques based on similar principles. The percentage of patients who reported doing somewhat better increased by 0.14 percent, effectively reducing the mental burden on healthcare professionals. These encouraging results indicate that more research, seminars, conferences, educational leaflets, and TED talks are needed to elucidate the effectiveness of SHUT-IT and encourage its implementation in clinical practice.
MUS patients are prevalent and can result in distressing experiences for doctors, nurses, and other healthcare workers. SHUT-IT is a promising intervention to reduce negative encounters and depressing stories. We hope that in the future, healthcare professionals will be able to manage MUS effectively by telling their patients to SHUT-IT.
A hearty laugh thanks to you both. It would not be surprising that the editor publishes Michiel's letter.p = 0.048
Social strata aside, medical doctors are incited to push through long, busy and stressful working hours from their first year of education at medical school. This behavior is encouraged early on and all throughout their education by senior staff that supervises them as students, interns and residents.Doctors often come from a very defined social strata and often have a very particular outlook and approach to life. I don't think they, as a group, necessarily have the background or training to be offering life advice to the range of people dealing with debilitating chronic fatigue.
It may be that a significant proportion of MDs deals with chronic fatigue to some degree, especially in financially overstretched, understaffed hospitals and surgeries. The result is that disregard or scorn rather than compassion towards patients presenting with chronic fatigue is the norm.
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