This times a million. So sick of seeing a life-destroying disease reduced down to 'tired', 'tiredness', 'fatigue', 'chronic fatigue'. That has GOT to GO. ME will never be taken seriously as long as people think it's 'tiredness', which they of course see as just laziness and therefore to be mocked and laughed at.We've just got to get rid of that word "Tired". It's being repeated in the Inquest. "Tired" is the most trivialising word, it leads the general public and some/most medical/health professionals to think that ME 'tiredness' is something they may have experienced, or something close to it. Because of the word. Everyone has experienced tiredness. That word is sabotaging us
Well said. It’s like we’re aliens, they need to understand that we’re different “under the bonnet” than the average unwell person. They’re like a medieval blacksmith being tasked with operating a 3D printer to make a horseshoe.I am beginning to get a clearer picture of just how badly people with ME/CFS will fall between all the stools laid out in the RCP guidance. The guidance rightly indicates that both enteral and parenteral support can always be justified if failure of nutrition is life-threatening, but it also brings in confusion about functional gut problems.
What seems to be missing from the accounts given in guidance documents is that there is a third type of problem in addition to structural gut failure and the disordered thinking of anorexia nervosa. The more I hear the more it seems to me that it is the symptoms of intolerance that are the both the beginning and the end of what matters. For people with very severe ME/CFS feeding may become intolerable, for reasons unknown and several of them. I have had pushback against this wording - being asked to talk of difficulty feeding rather than intolerance but I think intolerance is what needs focusing on.
When I say intolerance I am thinking of something impossible to overcome, rather like the intolerable hunger people can get after surviving craniopharyngeoma (hypothalamic damage). These people if left to themselves cannot avoid becoming grossly obese. No human can resist the hunger. In ME/CFS I think what health professionals do not understand is that there is an equally impossible to resist need to avoid certain stimuli. Another example of such impossibility is standing up if you have sever knee pain. It is not simply that you cannot stand the pain. Neurological signalling that you have no control of, or even awareness of, blocks the muscle contraction and prevents standing.
I think maybe the needs of people with ME/CFS need to be explained much more in terms of the actual experience of the patient. The problem IS the symptoms, which include both feeling terrible and blocks to function at a reflex level.
And the management has to pivot on management of the symptoms. Quiet side rooms are not just a kindness to sensitive souls. They are a physiologic necessity. So in emphasising just following good nutritional practice in my Qeios article I think I have missed something crucial. Standard policy as written out at present steers past what is needed for ME/CFS.
Thanks for the kind words, Trish & others - I've found if I rest well in advance of these, stay lying down, rest completely in the breaks, do nothing else on the same day and rest a lot afterwards it's just about within my tolerance on an otherwise reasonable day.You're doing a fantastic job, Nightsong. I'm sorry we don't seem to have anyone else well enough to provide such detailed summaries. I thought about signing up to listen, but know I'm not up to writing notes while listening.
Please only provide feedback at your own pace and if you feel it's not harming your health.
Beth Thompson again then someone from Social Services at DCCWho is giving evidence after lunch?
The more I hear the more it seems to me that it is the symptoms of intolerance that are the both the beginning and the end of what matters. For people with very severe ME/CFS feeding may become intolerable, for reasons unknown and several of them.
I think maybe the needs of people with ME/CFS need to be explained much more in terms of the actual experience of the patient. The problem IS the symptoms, which include both feeling terrible and blocks to function at a reflex level.
I am beginning to get a clearer picture of just how badly people with ME/CFS will fall between all the stools laid out in the RCP guidance. The guidance rightly indicates that both enteral and parenteral support can always be justified if failure of nutrition is life-threatening, but it also brings in confusion about functional gut problems.
What seems to be missing from the accounts given in guidance documents is that there is a third type of problem in addition to structural gut failure and the disordered thinking of anorexia nervosa. The more I hear the more it seems to me that it is the symptoms of intolerance that are the both the beginning and the end of what matters. For people with very severe ME/CFS feeding may become intolerable, for reasons unknown and several of them. I have had pushback against this wording - being asked to talk of difficulty feeding rather than intolerance but I think intolerance is what needs focusing on.
When I say intolerance I am thinking of something impossible to overcome, rather like the intolerable hunger people can get after surviving craniopharyngeoma (hypothalamic damage). These people if left to themselves cannot avoid becoming grossly obese. No human can resist the hunger. In ME/CFS I think what health professionals do not understand is that there is an equally impossible to resist need to avoid certain stimuli. Another example of such impossibility is standing up if you have sever knee pain. It is not simply that you cannot stand the pain. Neurological signalling that you have no control of, or even awareness of, blocks the muscle contraction and prevents standing.
I think maybe the needs of people with ME/CFS need to be explained much more in terms of the actual experience of the patient. The problem IS the symptoms, which include both feeling terrible and blocks to function at a reflex level.
And the management has to pivot on management of the symptoms. Quiet side rooms are not just a kindness to sensitive souls. They are a physiologic necessity. So in emphasising just following good nutritional practice in my Qeios article I think I have missed something crucial. Standard policy as written out at present steers past what is needed for ME/CFS.