Rick Sanchez
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Director of Danish Health Authority Søren Brostrøm Letter to the Editor Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Topic is regarding the Danish approach to 'functional disorders' in Denmark which includes ME/CFS.
Available @
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022399918309498?via=ihub
This is a sad development where the Danish Health Authority has bought into a faux scientific approach to ME/CFS, where the disease is apparently caused by some sort of bodily signal overload known as 'bodily distress syndrome'.
Yikes... The director honestly thinks 'chronic fatigue' is better suited for patients than 'ME/CFS' because it is supposedly more descriptive. Can't wait for him to campaign against the influenza diagnosis, once he learns the etymology of the term.
On a more serious note. This also shows the complete lack of understanding of ME/CFS, and shows that the Danish Health Authority sees the illness as simply being a condition where fatigue is present. Any ME/CFS researcher would shake their head at a understanding of ME/CFS that seems to completely ignore the immune system.
Still recommending CBT and GET of course. No surprise here.
I feel the ''succumb to pressure'' bit is particularly revealing. The Danish Health Authority sees the criticism of 'Functional disorders' entirely as misguided patient advocacy driven by patients who suffer from scientific illiteracy. They don't seem to even acknowledge that genuine criticism of functional disorders or CBT and GET is frequent in academia. This is troubling because advocates for 'functional disorders' are outnumbered significantly, yet they still somehow see it as giving into pressure from what they consider to be patients clueless about their own illness.
Topic is regarding the Danish approach to 'functional disorders' in Denmark which includes ME/CFS.
Available @
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022399918309498?via=ihub
Tiredness and dizziness. Headache and difficulties concentrating. Feeling bloated, rumbling in the stomach and frequent bowel movements. Pains, aches, tenderness. they are all common bodily signals that many of us experience on a frequent basis but with great variation. For some, these signals are so loud and so constant it becomes an almost constant 'state of alert'. When such a 'hurricane' of bodily signals becomes a disorder affecting quality of life and daily functioning, we call it functional disorder
This is a sad development where the Danish Health Authority has bought into a faux scientific approach to ME/CFS, where the disease is apparently caused by some sort of bodily signal overload known as 'bodily distress syndrome'.
Somatizing diagnoses such as ‘interstitial cystitis’ or ‘myalgic encephalomyelitis’, relying on assumptions or hypotheses of pathology, are often consensus-based and poorly defined symptomatic syndromes rather than clear disease entities based on rigorous scientific study and systematic evidence. ‘Painful bladder’ or ‘chronic fatigue’ perhaps work better as descriptive terms because they are directly rooted in the symptoms experienced by the patients. And it makes sense for us in the Danish Health Authority to accept the diagnostic umbrella term of ‘functional disorders’, because we achieve a common language and a common understanding of diseases that exhibit common patterns and where a set of common treatment principles often are effective. While the term ‘functional disorders’ is not perfect, we lack a better proposal meeting universal consensus, and we feel it will work well under the present circumstances. As a consequence of the widespread misconceptions and the inadequate and fragmented care, patients with functional diseases are often medicalized, misdiagnozed and mistreated.
Yikes... The director honestly thinks 'chronic fatigue' is better suited for patients than 'ME/CFS' because it is supposedly more descriptive. Can't wait for him to campaign against the influenza diagnosis, once he learns the etymology of the term.
On a more serious note. This also shows the complete lack of understanding of ME/CFS, and shows that the Danish Health Authority sees the illness as simply being a condition where fatigue is present. Any ME/CFS researcher would shake their head at a understanding of ME/CFS that seems to completely ignore the immune system.
We have evidence to show that graded physical exercise and cognitive therapy are effective in a number of functional disorders.
Still recommending CBT and GET of course. No surprise here.
The use of the term ‘functional disorders’ has been critized, also in Denmark. Some patients and some professionals feel that the best way out of stigmatization is to use a new fresh set of concepts and diagnoses. As an example, it has been suggested to use the term ‘complex symptoms’ as a neutral term to describe this group of patients. I regret that we have not been able to achieve a common terminology across our small country. And I do not feel that ‘complex symptoms’ is a good term, because in most cases the symptoms are common, such as fatigue, dizziness, headache, pain etc. Unfortunately, the stigmatization and misconceptions around functional disorders can lead to individual health professionals, health care institutions and even authorities such as The Danish Health Authority being exposed to often considerable pressure to recognize and promote certain diagnostic terms and entities, presumed causalities or specific treatment modalities, while at the same time rejecting others such as the term ‘functional disorders’. But if we succumb to pressure without a sound basis in well-meaning attempts to counter stigmatization and discrimination of patients, we run the risk of actually sustaining or feeding stigmatization and misconceptions thus causing patients to receive ineffective or potentially harmful treatment or maintaining patients in their illness in spite of the existence of effective and evidence-based treatment.
I feel the ''succumb to pressure'' bit is particularly revealing. The Danish Health Authority sees the criticism of 'Functional disorders' entirely as misguided patient advocacy driven by patients who suffer from scientific illiteracy. They don't seem to even acknowledge that genuine criticism of functional disorders or CBT and GET is frequent in academia. This is troubling because advocates for 'functional disorders' are outnumbered significantly, yet they still somehow see it as giving into pressure from what they consider to be patients clueless about their own illness.
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