United Kingdom: Action for ME (AfME) news

Robin Kerr is the only doctor currently.
1 nurse
1 admin person
1 doctor
2 physiotherapists
5 counsellors
3 chaplains

Possibly that mix isn't terrible - counselling and religious support from people familiar with ME/CFS could be important services that aren't being well provided by other organisations. But, it's not great for a service aiming to provide medical support.


Nina Muirhead and Roin Kerr presented a webinar 'Learn about ME' about a year ago. Robin Kerr seems very caring and certainly convinced the illness is biological. Unfortunately, he presents things like CPETs and findings of high lactate as proof of the pathophysiology, and I don't think we can be so sure about that. He says things like 'people with higher lactate levels at rest are more likely to get more severe symptom exacerbation if you push them to do things'. He wheels out the Krebs cycle. He talks about the Systrom reports of peripheral oxygen extraction restrictions, and about endothelial damage. He wraps it all up and ties it with a bow - but I don't think the situation is nearly as resolved as he suggests.

So far, it is the sort of stuff that someone who has read some papers but hasn't read enough to start to wonder how much is true might think. Maybe not super harmful - the doctors can feel as though they understand something and at least they aren't thinking it's all psychological. However, what about the people who don't have high lactate when you measure it (people like me) - is it fine to 'push them to do things' because the paper suggests that they are not so likely to get symptom exacerbation? Should we conclude that people without high lactate at rest don't have ME/CFS?

He mentions micro clots, mast cell activation, too much fight or flight sympathetic activation because the parasympathetic nerves go deeper into the endothelium and so are more affected by the endothelial inflammation. He says 'there's inflammation, there's always been inflammation, the clue's in the name' - 'itis' in myalgic encephalomyelitis'.

Symptom management
'These are some of the things that I do in general practice and that I feel comfortable doing. I realise that if this is new and unfamiliar, it might not feel entirely comfortable to you.'
Praises the Bateman Horne Center - 'one of the great places to treat ME, in the US'. We know that simply is not true, and it's concerning to hear a doctor say that.

Mentions the NASA lean test, mentions fluids, salt. A lot about POTS. He seems to equate autonomic dysfunction with POTS. I don't think I heard 'orthostatic intolerance' being mentioned. He says bisoprolol (a beta-blocker) can be life-changing for some people - and maybe it is.

There's a slide on MCAS. He treats with anti-histamines. He talks about a London study of Long Covid patients where 20% reported symptomatic resolution when they were given both H1 and H2 receptor antagonists e.g. loratadine and famotidine, and 52% reported some improvement. Here's the thread - we haven't discussed it there. There's some discussion on a thread looking at the evidence for histamine being part of the ME/CFS problem. It is an observational study with self-reports. Dr Kerr didn't mention that the reports are therefore unreliable.


I don't think Dr Robin Kerr is terrible, or a lost cause. His heart is in the right place, he clearly wants and likes to help. But, he needs to spend time here, or somewhere else where ideas are challenged, somewhere where he doesn't get to be the one dispensing wisdom to grateful patients and clinicians all of the time.

Who exactly in AfME is making sure that their medical staff are well-informed, making sure that the treatments used in the clinic are eventually subject to sound trials? Nina Muirhead has roles in doctor education, and she seemed to be completely on board with what Robin Kerr was presenting. So, I'm not sure where the good information that convinces AfME officers to do better is going to come from. I think the Trustees of AfME should be concerned - their clinical service is a reputational risk.

...some edits to fix typos
 
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So I don't know what strategy they use to rule out other diseases but for most ME/CFS patients that's not really the problem..

No, of course it isn't for people with ME/CFS because they turned out to be the ones who didn't have Hodgkin's Disease. Accurate diagnosis is 90% of the reason for seeing a doctor. Beyond that you could read an S4ME factsheet and do alright with access to practical help from a nurse.
 
What the charities do not seem to get is that there are three approaches to ME/CFS.

1. BPS - with GET and CBT
2. ME folklore with antihistamines and pseudophysiology about anaerobic thresholds
3. Evidence based advice

They should be providing 3, not 2. The 2021 NICE Guideline is not a good place to start either, because it ended up as a fudge. You just need to stick to evidence. That may not sell well and bring in donations but there are ethical issues here that are more important than donations.
 
I think it started in Action for ME when the ME Trust merged with Action for ME.
Yeah. I would like to see more focus on social care from charities. There’s obviously a demand for treatments but there are none. Meanwhile we know what many of us need to live a better life. Safe managed environments to live in which avoid triggers of worsening and have our basic needs met. Until the research can provide treatments. And yet there’s nothing.

In terms of healthcare it’s again, not about treatments yet but changing the NHS so it is safe for us. I don’t see how what the charities are doing provides model for that. More likely it provides excuses for people to not deliver the changes needed.
 
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