From post #526 The opinion piece in the Journal of Swedish Medical Association
about acknowledging the impact of psychosocial factors on all illness. There is a risk that the psychosocial will be given low priority when research money is distributed and specialist clinics are opened.
With regards to long-covid
OK so this is going to meander from here to . . .
I'd like to point out (again) that the BPS keep saying this (importance of psychosocial impact) and there are a few problems with this statement.
First for illnesses such as ME/cfs it has only ever been about the psychological factors. The whole underpinning of CBT and GET was a psychological construct (pyschological factors were the only important factor). It has always been that biomedical factors were given NO priority by the very people now (seemingly) having a panic attack about being left behind. Generally with illness when one prioritises properly the biomedical must be above any psychological considerations for most if not all illnesses.
Also, where is the social aspect that the BPS are so keen on ensuring that it not be neglected? There are social factors that impact illness. One of those factors (as an example)
would be institutional stigmatisation of a group of people who are vulnerable and may experience distress due to prolonged ill health. Instead of alleviating this distress and using thoughtful consideration when told their treatment was not helping they compounded it with narratives of violent, harassing, angry militants.
So now the tables are turning--we get this. And if I take instruction from the BPS leaders I can call this ravings of people in panic over not being seen as the preeminent eminences of most relevance in the understanding and treatment of ill health. Welcome to reality.
I am not accusing anyone of ranting but merely pointing out what fair turn around would look like.
I would like to know exactly what constitutes social factors in the BPS context? I don't recall reading mention of any even as they are supposedly important enough to warrant concern from BPS people that they not be forgotten. Especially when social factors are contributing from outside the persons sphere of influence and exist at the level of need for implementing solutions (I don't know how else to say this) at the social level. Helping people access resources for example is that important?
Here on a number of threads discussion is ongoing regarding the BPS current focus on changing the playing field. Having been caught out that their research methods often really do not meet basic standards of good quality research we now find a movement to lower the bar for their 'preciously special' research that cannot meet those standards and therefore should get a free pass. IMO they can lower the bar as far as they like but they should not expect that research to be given the same level of confidence as uh, real research (or even be called scientific for that matter).
One can only hope that policy makers are wavering somewhat by now realising that 'policy based evidence development' (Thanks
@FMMM1) (and which I have cheekily acronymed as P-BED) has been a (to quote some emotional heated words) a 'disastrous misapplication' (see:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/bmj-r...mbers-of-the-grade-working-group.19317/page-4 post #65) of policy. It will be refreshing when the day arrives that research in the field of long term illness again leads with science rather than wasting so much time, effort and money on feeding BPS egos and promoting 'disasterous' policies based on prejudice of the healthy.