This is disgusting. As a psychiatrist, MS should be fighting for psychiatric diagnosis to be socially recognised as genuine, instead of implying we are trying to get underserved care.So, for a person with an illness of ambiguous status such as CFS, the choice is between being given a diagnosis of a bona-fide medical condition which everyone regards as real, an adequate reason to be away from work, a reason to seek medical care and a blameless affliction or a psychiatric diagnosis which many people regard as imaginary brought on by
yourself, evidence of laziness rather than illness and not really deserving of any particular sort of care.
This is disgusting. As a psychiatrist, MS should be fighting for psychiatric diagnosis to be socially recognised as genuine, instead of implying we are trying to get underserved care.
This is disgusting. As a psychiatrist, MS should be fighting for psychiatric diagnosis to be socially recognised as genuine, instead of implying we are trying to get underserved care.
Yes, but it's the usual tactic, they keep repeating the prejudices around psychiatry saying "some people say...", but I've never seen any of the BPS crowd fighting these prejudices, but spreading them without criticising them. That's like Wessely saying that some doctors dislike us, without condemning this dislike, or White and the underserving sick.I think there is a need to avoid jumping to conclusions here. He says that psychiatric diagnosis is one "which many people regard as imaginary...etc". He is merely describing public perception, and, as a description, this is no doubt accurate.
It is strange how "dysfunctional cognitions" and "maladaptive behaviours", those reasons for CBT and GET have wholly disappeared from the description, just as the first steps towards the Pace Trial, to justify them, were being taken.
Yes, but it's the usual tactic, they keep repeating the prejudices around psychiatry saying "some people say...", but I've never seen any of the BPS crowd fighting these prejudices, but spreading them without criticising them. That's like Wessely saying that some doctors dislike us, without condemning this dislike, or White and the underserving sick.
My bad...It was Sharpe who used the 'undeserving sick' quote, and there was an implied criticism of it.
I'm not sure they try. I remember Wessely (Well, I think it was Wessely) saying that we just refused to accept the stigma associated with mental health as if it should be something to be accepted.I think that they do talk about the need to challenge these prejudices, but then they continue to try to use them to dismiss patients raising concerns about things like PACE. Actions matter more than words.
(Note this and excerpt in previous post is from 2005)
Sharpe does go on to say:
"
At present however if one has an ambiguous condition the rational choice may well be to
vote ‘‘medical’’ rather than to vote ‘‘psychiatric’’.
From this view point one may argue that it is not the views of those advocates who attempt to defend CFS from psychiatric territory which must change, but us who must change in the way we currently conceptualize illness.
So whilst the issue of relationship between CFS and psychiatric disorder may seem to be
merely a small issue, it does, in fact, raise issues which challenge the way we see the larger
perspective of modern medical thought and practice."
The whole thing is to push the 'mind/body' thing; it has got nothing to do with CFS per se.
And they succeeded.
They created this illusion that it was/is all about the stigma of mental illness.
Since airing this episode, we received complaints. We value this feedback and are in editorial discussions about how to respond.
We would like to highlight:
Updated: 9th April 2019
- The intention of the episode was to look at the relationship between science and the public. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (aka. myalgic encephalomyelitis) was intended as an example of the broader theme.
- We are awaiting a decision from the Cochrane Review about the paper to inform any editorial decision. Read the latest here
- The response from Cochrane’s Editor we quoted from the Reuters piece was a part inclusion of this full statement.
- The episode included two authors of the PACE trial. The trial is considered controversial and has received criticisms. This paper has not been retracted by The Lancet.
The intention of the episode was to look at the relationship between science and the public. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (aka. myalgic encephalomyelitis) was intended as an example of the broader theme.
The Guardian is just the worst.
I'm fairly confident the Daily Mail is Just The Worst™.![]()
The Daily Mail article following the Reuters hit piece was actually better than the original Kelland article. It had fewer gross inaccuracies anyway, and was a bit less egregiously biased.Not on ME/CFS issues (which is just about all I feel able to make an informed judgement on nowadays). That the Guardian manages to combine their ignorant bigotry with a smug sense of self-righteousness makes them all the more unbearable.
Not on ME/CFS issues (which is just about all I feel able to make an informed judgement on nowadays).
I've seen a lot more terrible Daily Mail articles on ME over the last 10 years than I have in the Guardian...
Yeah, this. How can it be a conversation about the role of the public in science when it only airs the personal grievances of influential academics (and a celebrity-physician) who are deliberately obstructing the role of the public in science, up to and including the very population they allege to serve, and does not involve a counter perspective, especially from "the public"?If that was the intention, shouldn't some of the public critics of this work have been allowed to speak?