Trude says that she would like to take back the term 'biopsychosocial'. She points out that things like financial difficulties and lack of family support do make a difference to prognosis. I think this is a really interesting thought. Things like stigma certainly do make a difference to feelings of self-worth, and willingness to seek medical support for ME/CFS and other health issues. Going forward, I am going to avoid calling the proponents of the idea that ME/CFS is psychogenic and/or can be fixed by positive thinking and getting off the sofa 'BPS proponents'. I'll probably just avoid the term 'biopsychosocial'.
The idea that health has multiple dimensions encompassing those three is wise and good. Even necessary. It definitely needs to happen in the future.
But the biopsychosocial model has effectively made it impossible to do this in medicine. The recent renaming of the American psychosomatic society (or association, whatever) to substitute psychosomatic with biopsychosocial is just one of many examples of how the terms have blurred to the point where there is no distinction. Biopsychosocial has forever been sullied. Psychosomatic gives the game away. Functional had that perfect neutrality and it's precisely because of this that it was coopted.
And with recent decades, holistic has essentially become synonymous with quackery and pseudoscience. In trying to deceive, this industry has essentially killed useful labels, by equating them with, well, them.
So we're really running into a vocabulary wall here. The idea is fundamentally good, done well it would improve health care. Sick people do need social and psychological support (though very rarely from therapists or clinicians), but the BPS ideology is largely built to deny it and more, in large part being motivated by insurance and disability programs who want to exclude disabled people without looking like monsters.
But really there are only so many words that can be used, and if things go on for much longer there will simply be none left to label what is good about this notion, essentially killing this idea. Even patient-centered and evidence-based now basically mean nothing at all, they're purely marketing labels.
It would probably require a fully neutral and made-up term that can't be substituted or equated to a perverted version of the same ideas. But even then, with time they'd just corrupt it anyway. Just like they did with pacing, to make it mean the opposite. Or how they commonly use patient focus groups, 'listening' to them, only to simply push forward the themes and ideas they want. They corrupt everything they touch, and see nothing wrong with it. It's quite absurd.