NICE has produced Minutes from the roundtable discussion of 18th October which led to the publication of the new guideline 'Myalgic encephalomyelitis (or encephalopathy)/chronic fatigue syndrome: diagnosis and management' [NG206]. Myalgic encephalomyelitis (or encephalopathy)/chronic fatigue...
www.meresearch.org.uk
Thankyou. I took it that the summary of this minuted discussion referred to the NICE procedure for its own ongoing involvement in the implementation after the guideline is completed. Quoting from the 18.10.21 minutes of the roundtable NICE held, shortly before the final Guideline publication:
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9. Summary of discussion and any other business: Gillian Leng thanked everyone for a very helpful and productive discussion and added the following summary:
• Clear that
issues around commissioning of services needs to be addressed.
• Training materials could help with implementation.
•
Examples of good practice from the patient perspective would be a positive step
.
•
NICE will work with system partners and stakeholders on these.
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Made it optional - not the core service still being traded. How many local people want a personalised exercise plan? Is any local commssioner asking? What did the national consultation and the national audit discover on this level of demand? And Action4ME's survey?
Can central and local NHS government continue to exclude informed patient stakeholders from its contracting consultations with all the other stakeholders? And invent a local demand? Do all local patients want core clinical services to provide everyone with a personalised exercise plan, as assumed?
Yes, I doubt it can be shrunk into the MEA app, even as a fringe minority option. Especially as the Guideline insists the patient must be allowed to use their own words. PROMS won't allow that. Service as proposed by the market traders appeared to put exercise plans at the core. And also dispensed with the
ongoing specialist team service recommended.
The MEA website makes its laudable
trade proposal for NICE-compliance, in Scotland, but overlooks all the NICE-compliant,
ongoing, specialist team service.
- "There was discussion around the meaning of specialist teams and services for ME/CFS. ,.."
- "NICE will also look at the recommendations on specialist teams with a view to improving clarity..."
- "The group talked about the importance of listening to patients and their families about harms, especially considering the Cumberlege review."
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Current Guideline NG206: Box 3 ME/CFS specialist team:
"Specialist teams consist of a range of healthcare professionals with training and experience in assessing, diagnosing, treating and managing ME/CFS.
"They
commonly have medically trained clinicians from a variety of specialisms (
including rheumatology, rehabilitation medicine, endocrinology, infectious diseases, neurology, immunology, general practice and paediatrics)
"as well as
access to other healthcare professionals specialising in ME/CFS. These may include physiotherapists, exercise physiologists, occupational therapists, dietitians, and clinical or counselling psychologists.
"Children and young people are likely to be cared for under local or regional paediatric teams that have experience of working with children and young people with ME/CFS in collaboration with ME/CFS specialist centres."
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I take it that: the core of doctors, in this model, can access the fringe of therapists, as and if and when needed. These therapists became optional features of the product. The doctors were returned to the core. And maybe the exercise physiologists listed as "other" with the other therapists - are not medically trained in rehabilitation medicine.