The patients were never intended to be the primary beneficiaries of this approach. It exists for the convenience and benefit of the healthcare/insurance/benefits system.
Depraved.
The patients were never intended to be the primary beneficiaries of this approach. It exists for the convenience and benefit of the healthcare/insurance/benefits system.
The right course of action is to admit that we need to develop the right way of managing these patients. In the meantime patients need legal protection against what is being done to them.
I think it was DrShelton’s letter, not Dr StrainI find that hard to believe, if that is what he said. He is a gastroenterologist, he would have seen lots of patients over his career getting TPN. It is common on surgical wards when people eg. people's with Chrohn's Disease (and many other gastrointestinal diseases), who are unable to absorb nutrients in their GI tract go on TPN.
I think there may be some information missing and perhaps he thought the only way to get her to have nutrient support via TPN was to section her. Yes, a lot of nursing support would be required and would have taken away the last of her autonomy and be very traumatic.
No, I am just curious that they weren't asking the nursing staff about their attitudes towards ME. I know they said they had never nursed a ME patient but I wonder where Dr Strain's concerns in the letter to the Trust CEO, about all the staff who didn't believe ME was a medical problem but apparently this was not the doctors as they all testified they did.
From memory, I tried to argue that we know it’s not psychological because we have all this evidence of physiological abnormalities. Now, I would emphasise how little we know about the pathology. I would use the NICE guideline, the re-analysis of PACE and other studies to show that CBT/GET don’t work and cause harm. And I would highlight the systemic injustices which have been caused by the adoption of the unscientific BPS model of ME/CFS.
I have written to and spoken to my new MP. She’s new to me because of constituency boundary changes but not a new MP. I asked her to join the new APPG, and to ask the Health Secretary to ring-fence appropriate funding for ME/CFS research. On the phone we also discussed the NICE gl, the inadequacy of services and the inquest, which she was aware of through the media.
She told me she would join the APPG and speak to Sajid Javid, who she knows well. She also suggested applying for another Westminster Hall or backbench business debate. She is now in opposition having previously been in government, which means she has more time and opportunity to get involved with this type of thing.
She said she would report back to me after speaking to Javid and AfME (who have secretarial duties for the APPG) to discuss what more she can do. I also want to ensure that she gets the arguments right if she submits any questions etc.
I was heartened by her apparent sympathy and enthusiasm to help. And I’m sure that the media coverage of the inquest has helped with that.
I asked her to join the new APPG, and to ask the Health Secretary to ring-fence appropriate funding for ME/CFS research. On the phone we also discussed the NICE gl, the inadequacy of services and the inquest,
how little we know about the pathology
Danger in going off topic here, but it occurs to me I used to know very well someone who is now in the HoL. Haven't had any contact since going to the Motor Show in 1986. Is the APPG a lot of work? Is it important? Does it actually achieve anything? I could think about contacting him to see if he'd be willing to join.I asked her to join the new APPG, and to ask the Health Secretary to ring-fence appropriate funding for ME/CFS research.
This is probably where the whole "it's not medical, it's not quite psychiatric either, it's at the interface of the mind-body-spirit-brain-holy-ghost split" is critical. Let's be honest, there is no such thing as duty of care. Duties, by definition, cannot be shirked, they are mandatory. Rules only matter when they are enforced properly, and in the case of chronic illness there are clear orders to deny them. Worse, they spill over, as we saw here. A clear medical emergency was basically overruled by this obsession with "it could be fake and we're being taken for suckers" that seem to provide more motivation than any other factor.This ‘Duty of Care’ requires that when explaining medical matters, they must give a full explanation of all the evidenced Medical views and treatment options together with information on all the risk’s associated with each treatment recommendation. Failure to do so is misleading and could be construed as an attempt to influence patient/public choice of medical view/treatment.
I’m not particularly knowledgeable but I think it’s one of those things where it’s a as much work as any member wants it to be. Carol Monaghan obviously put in a huge amount of work as chair but I think other MPs just turn up to the odd meeting and that’s about it.Danger in going off topic here, but it occurs to me I used to know very well someone who is now in the HoL. Haven't had any contact since going to the Motor Show in 1986. Is the APPG a lot of work? Is it important? Does it actually achieve anything? I could think about contacting him to see if he'd be willing to join.
By legal protection I mean approximately this: a prohibition to manage patients as if they only had a psychological or psychiatric problem when there is no good reason to think that is the case.
Specifically, not being able to find a disease through an objective test is not a good reason. Nor is the gut feeling of a doctor, or evidence from low quality clinical trials, or presence of comorbid psychiatric disorders or signs believed to be diagnostic of FND. A patient can be managed as if they had a psychological or psychi
atric problem when there is really a good reason to think that is the only problem they have. And doctors making these decisions need to have the possibility of legal consequences in the back of their mind or they won't be careful enough.
Very strange letter in The Times this morning from
Miles H Beaman
As nobody asked him for his opinion and he obviously has nothing remotely intelligent or useful to say, hopefully they'll think he's irrelevant.
Dr Max writing in the Daily Mail said:The current received medical opinion is that ME is the result of complex physical and psychological factors.
Most doctors working in this area are psychiatrists, yet some have received abuse and even death threats from a small number of ME activists who view the involvement of mental health professionals in this field as somehow suggesting that it isn't a 'real illness'
Imagine a patient group who are mainly limited physically by low energy, many are housebound. They’re not scared of us sending “death threats” they’re scared we’re intelligent and we can see the emperor is not wearing a stitch.So you admit it's just an opinion - no actual evidence? OK good. Most doctors working in this area are not psychiatrists, they are GPs.
But according to BPS, every illness is "the result of complex physical and psychological factors" - so why does ME/CFS uniquely have the "abuse and death threats" from activists?
Why not MS and FND? Why not fibromyalgia, post-treatment Lyme disease, or Gulf War Illness? Death threats from the latter group of combat veterans in particular would by definition be quite concerning.
Wow. Crying.Trial By Error: Sarah Boothby’s Statement to the Inquest
"The two weeks of public hearings in the inquest into the death of Maeve Boothby O’Neill ended on Friday. (The coroner, Deborah Archer, plans to issue her findings on the facts this coming Friday.) Last Thursday, both of Maeve’s parents testified. Her mom, Sarah Boothby, took the stand first. She read most of the statement into the public record, omitting only the brief section that Archer had herself read out at the start of the inquest. (She also didn’t read out a list of questions for the inquest as well as references to support her account.)
Here is the statement as read into the evidence:"
https://virology.ws/2024/08/05/trial-by-error-sarah-boothbys-statement-to-the-inquest/
Wow. Crying.
To have such grace and dignity after enduring such an ordeal is truly inspirational.Trial By Error: Sarah Boothby’s Statement to the Inquest
"The two weeks of public hearings in the inquest into the death of Maeve Boothby O’Neill ended on Friday. (The coroner, Deborah Archer, plans to issue her findings on the facts this coming Friday.) Last Thursday, both of Maeve’s parents testified. Her mom, Sarah Boothby, took the stand first. She read most of the statement into the public record, omitting only the brief section that Archer had herself read out at the start of the inquest. (She also didn’t read out a list of questions for the inquest as well as references to support her account.)
Here is the statement as read into the evidence:"
https://virology.ws/2024/08/05/trial-by-error-sarah-boothbys-statement-to-the-inquest/