Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
If tolerated, medication to improve sleep and medication to improve pain. This can involve a lot of experimentation with different drugs, often given at much lower doses than normal.
W.r.t regulating sleep and wake times, I think it's more important to emphasise quality of sleep rather than trying to guide it into a regular schedule.
Proactive support and advice should be offered to help patients apply for and keep social security benefits. This is the one area where doctors can genuinely make a difference but are usually reluctant to get involved.
Encourage a culture where patients are given “permission” to rest and not to feel guilty when they can't do things.
I was not intending to get involved with drugs, which would require controlled trials of their own.
And, hang on, I am not asking people to give advice here - because the whole point is that we do not know what advice to give, any more than Dr Chalder does. We need to test options. One of the things that I pointed out in my evidence to NICE was that Dr Wessely and Dr Chalder wrote a paper with fifteen instances of the word should in it before they had even done any trials.
I am wanting to get evidence. Peopl's experience is valuable but as a starting point for gathering evidence, otherwise we are just tiptoeing in the BPS footsteps.