hotblack
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
A large number of posts have been moved from Severe Eating Difficulties in ME/CFS.
Where I differ is bringing up any other excuse than this being a complete failure of the medical teams and the NHS. There are systemic problems and those systemic problems are linked to influence from the BPS crowd and the complicity of doctors and managers and everyone else in those organisations through wilful ignorance and refusal to change.
If you disagree, please show me one instance of that change occurring, of people listening and learning and delivering consistently better clinical care for us. Becuase I’ve asked before and you’ve said there are no good examples of clinical care. And yet on the other side of the scales we have thousands of examples of poor clinical care and thousands examples of us bending over backwards to help people and organisations understand and them refusing.
You don’t get systemic change until the individuals admit there is a problem to be solved. And it is human nature to avoid admitting they are part of that, so if you give easier routes out they take them. We need to remove those easy excuses and routes out as well as giving them an easy route to change but that will need an admission of the problem. And I don’t see that happening at the level needed.
Edit: I’m at the point where the only solution seems to be to shout about the failures loudly enough until people notice because speaking softly has not worked. We have failires everywhere but they’re hidden. People give excuses. We need light on this and to bring all the examples of all the failures together so nobody can pretend its a one off or the fault of the patient or the family, but an institutional blind spot.
I get the point. And I absolutely agree that many of these people are not BPS. Ive said before that this is a systemic failure and that we should approach it as that because upsetting individuals egos doesn’t help bring them round. And I stand by this,When you find yourself in a situation where you are charged with keeping someone alive and nobody can give clear advice but you know you have to do something you don't always end up doing what is best. I am just arguing that channelling anger aginst professionals who have never expected to look after ME/CFS and are caught up in the web of other people's ignorance and conceit may not be a good idea
Where I differ is bringing up any other excuse than this being a complete failure of the medical teams and the NHS. There are systemic problems and those systemic problems are linked to influence from the BPS crowd and the complicity of doctors and managers and everyone else in those organisations through wilful ignorance and refusal to change.
If you disagree, please show me one instance of that change occurring, of people listening and learning and delivering consistently better clinical care for us. Becuase I’ve asked before and you’ve said there are no good examples of clinical care. And yet on the other side of the scales we have thousands of examples of poor clinical care and thousands examples of us bending over backwards to help people and organisations understand and them refusing.
You don’t get systemic change until the individuals admit there is a problem to be solved. And it is human nature to avoid admitting they are part of that, so if you give easier routes out they take them. We need to remove those easy excuses and routes out as well as giving them an easy route to change but that will need an admission of the problem. And I don’t see that happening at the level needed.
Edit: I’m at the point where the only solution seems to be to shout about the failures loudly enough until people notice because speaking softly has not worked. We have failires everywhere but they’re hidden. People give excuses. We need light on this and to bring all the examples of all the failures together so nobody can pretend its a one off or the fault of the patient or the family, but an institutional blind spot.
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