Well, of course. That's provably false. The BPS crowd depends on claims that can't be proven false. They don't care that they can't be proven true, just not false.who argues that no single treatment is best for all maladies.
Well, of course. That's provably false. The BPS crowd depends on claims that can't be proven false. They don't care that they can't be proven true, just not false.who argues that no single treatment is best for all maladies.
That is a very good reason not to try figuring out other people's beliefs, but to concentrate our energies on examining and finding out our own beliefs.I don’t think we’ll get very far if we try to figure out why someone believes what they believe. We’ll have a hard enough time figuring out what they actually believe because they tend to be quite inconsistent depending on which topic they are talking about.
I'm curious. Do you think the same approach to illness applies to cancer, Parkinsons disease, diabetes, to take a few random examples?That is a very good reason not to try figuring out other people's beliefs, but to concentrate our energies on examining and finding out our own beliefs.
My belief is that ME/CFS is not one single disease but a syndrome, a concatenation of various conditions affecting body, mind and spirit. Each individual needs to discover their own unique presentation and adress it in their own way.
I don't think that's so different from what I think. The flaws in their 'science' and reasoning are not obvious unless you do three things that most people, including clinicians, politicians, and 'the public' never do:I seem to have a different view about the BPS theories than some commenters here. I don't don't think the flaws are "obvious". Quite the opposite: I find the BPS ideas' subtlety is what makes them so effectively dangerous.
Your questions seem to indicate that you got the point(s), precisely.I'm curious. Do you think the same approach to illness applies to cancer, Parkinsons disease, diabetes, to take a few random examples?
Or is there something different about ME/CFS that leads you to this belief about ME/CFS involving body, mind and spirit, and treatment requiring the individual to sort out their own approach?
If ME/CFS is so individual, what would be the point of scientific research and clinical trials? And what would be the point of this forum?
I think that you want to say that you believe ME/CFS to be on a spectrum and not being a syndrome. A syndrome is a distinct, uniform illness that shows up fairly similar in most of the patients.That is a very good reason not to try figuring out other people's beliefs, but to concentrate our energies on examining and finding out our own beliefs.
My belief is that ME/CFS is not one single disease but a syndrome, a concatenation of various conditions affecting body, mind and spirit. Each individual needs to discover their own unique presentation and adress it in their own way.
Isn't that true for any illness, if you mean the experience of living with the illness. But scientists and doctors can understand a lot about cancer, PD, diabetes, and many other diseases, and thereby find and apply useful treatments, without ever having first hand experience.No doctor, no scientist, no one can fully understand ME/CFS without actual experience, and second-hand is actually anecdotal and hearsay.
Are you aware that the concept of autism spectrum, ADHD, and other diagnoses are contested within psychiatry and that the idea of neurotypicality is an idea founding the identity struggles of a political movement but hasn't any scientific credentials?Neurotypicals tend to prefer harmony over sincerity. The harmony is constructed by putting on a mask to hide one's true feelings and thoughts, making an effort to conform to group consensus, and displaying various behaviours intended to reduce to reduce tension and reassure each other that everything is okay.
The other day I was asked why I didn't come to the hiking group last week and I said because I didn't feel like it without hesitation. That provoked laughter (a social signal to reduce interpersonal tension) because it was considered borderline insensitive. The good social skills response would have been to reassure them that I value their company and cite a good reason for not coming or making one up. But in reality the group isn't that important to my life and I had other things I wanted to do more that day and didn't feel like explaining. In other contexts my behaviour would have been interpreted as rude.
A neurotypical person will often intuitively know what the correct behaviour is in a context, but they are often not good at explaining why or explaining how rules change with the context. That's presumably because they developed an intuitive sense for these things at a young age.
There aren't only negatives, sometimes the autistic honesty is very appreciated by others and it is useful to form deep authentic connections.
For anyone who is prepared to open their minds and do the above 3 things, it's obvious the BPS approach to ME/CFS is wrong and harmful. Most people don't see any reason to bother. So I agree their ideas are dangerous because most people don't take the steps needed to see the problem, and the proponents do their best to flood the zone with propaganda to keep it that way.
I agree with that. I wasn't trying to suggest it would be easy for most people, much as it should be for clinicians.The whole story should be made very accessible to them. Even getting the chance to bring the story across is not a given.
Yeah I certainly didn't see the flaws and obfuscations in BPS logic until it was far too late. It's very compelling at first glance, especially for someone with a humanities background who's understanding of medical science and psychology is through popular memes and therapy sessions and having read outdated people like Freud who were influential in 20th century literature. Which explains why so many journalists fall for it. Can't explain why so many medics fall for it though. That's just embarrassing for them.I seem to have a different view about the BPS theories than some commenters here. I don't think the flaws are "obvious". Quite the opposite: I find the BPS ideas' subtlety is what makes them so effectively dangerous.
When I read my country's mecfs policy a year ago, I thought it was pretty good. Today I recognize it as heavily influenced by BPS proponents and preventing biomedical research.
When I discuss the BPS model with people close to me, they are often attracted to the ideas, and in the past I have found it hard to refute them. They "know someone that recovered" or hear "mind and body are connected" and are convinced.
The local BPS professor supports their claims with trial data (Fukuda criteria) and "values good science". They stay vague enough so that they are not *obviously* wrong. The B in BPS gives them credibility.
The history and prejudice (which I was guilty of too) don't help either. It is easy to be seen as a difficult patient.
I can see why policymakers, practitioners, patients, even researchers fall for the BPS ideas.
Effectively challenging those ideas requires more than exposing the flaws in the science behind them.
There are good resources but they have to be willing to put in the time and effort to learn, and a patient in a new group is unlikely to be the person they turn to for information on why their approach is wrong.
Maybe we could ask them to provide us with follow up evidence from their clinic's patients showing what effect the treatment had. If they allow discussion in the group and sharing of how people are getting on with the advice, maybe tell them you're not finding it helpful, and ask what effect it's supposed to have. Get them thinking.
And worse. They are actively dangerous, and I am now firmly of the view that they are simply unacceptable on their own. Adequate blinding, and/or objective measures, or get out of the game.Critique trial methodology Examine the flaws in their clinical trial methodology, particularly recognising that unblinded trials with subjective outcome measures are useless
You don't. You appeal to those with power over them.Let's say I want to engage with them, try to at least plant a seed of doubt in their minds. Pointing out the flaws in their research might push them into the defensive. How do I handle this without being seen as a difficult patient --how do you even get someone to read beyond the first sentences of an email when they may be prejudiced against you?
I know little about the topic. I've also started moving away from thinking that I might be in the spectrum. For me the attractiveness of the idea was that it allowed a different angle and highlighted certain ideas that I was interested in. But ultimately I find this diagnosis is not useful and probably more of a barrier than a help.I can highly recommend to check out these theories. I find it very sad and scandalous that so many normal and healthy children get psychiatric diagnoses at such a young age now with psychiatrists communicating to them that at their core something is abnormal and different with them when according to the above theories they simply have their strengths in other areas that are the most appreciated by our culture but have a completely healthy and typical expression of their psyche.
You don't. You appeal to those with power over them.
I am glad you gained some distance again to autism spectrum theory. I don't think it is a "subjective diagnosis". I simply think it's not a very good theory. And the pathologizing of normal is its most harmful flaw.It's certainly a highly subjective diagnosis.
Well, Freud was a doctor and psychiatry is a medical field. Psychoanalysis is still very powerful within medicine, a bit less so only in the US, I guess, where they established a new cult around psych drugs polypharmacy.Can't explain why so many medics fall for it though.
That is the problem. The rot goes all the way to the top, with the occasional exception.The chain seems to go quite high up, maybe I best start praying![]()