“... a lovely book written in 1912 by a man called Jamieson Hurry called “Vicious Circles of Neurasthenia” and he drew..it’s a little book of diagrams really that he drew..rather sweet really going from mind to body and back again
and I think we have some very interesting examples of how you can beget/ be...get (?) an illness and then behaviour you adopt serves to perpetuate the illness
So I guess do we need to think about a different paradigm? Should we be thinking about psychosomatic illness which was the old idea, asthma, so on, we’re psychosomatic illnesses; the other illnesses weren’t, they were I suppose kind of real illnesses
or should we be thinking about psychosomatic medicine and I thought the talks this afternoon were really interesting in putting these mechanisms in context,
and the context is its complex and that probably all symptoms have a psychological aspect to them
so that’s a shift isn’t it? And then you take this even further and we hear about IBS and we’re hearing about dizziness and we get a kind of figure ground flip here
because it used to be there was all those diseases out there and it was these little weird people, you guys here, that were interested in this psychosomatic stuff
and then suddenly we realise ‘no! We’re the normal people!’ We’re .. we are interested.. that’s most illnesses that people have, are not based in disease, disease is actually the minority sport.
Disease is very important in determining mortality, but determining morbidity in the population disease is less important than the the illnesses that are driven more predominately by these other factors
So I think we maybe need to be thinking... a lot of hints today about how we change paradigm um and I think for research that’s going to mean as we’re hearing today, they’re fantastic presentations - neurologists and psychiatrists endocrinologists...
so we’ve actually got to take a more joined up view. The idea that we can just have psychologists psychiatrists when it comes to anything like a medical condition study we’re going to have be mixed up together, we’re going to have to have a joined up approach and psychosomatic meaning body and mind, psychology and other biological factors, are the way to go
And I think the same’s going to be the case for clinical teams and when you think about obesity and about diabetes and about vestibular disease, you see some wonderful examples of how we have to put together what used to be called psychosomatic, and what used to be called medical.
So I think this is a really exciting time, I think this has crystallised well today, we’re on the edge of thinking about these things in a completely different way.
And as Judith said, you know, a lot of the the ways we think about these we have to change the way that we and other doctors think about illness
and rather than just think there’s a lot of normal patients and a few weird patients out there, there’s probably just a lot of weird doctors out there including us
OK any questions?