They have always attacked charities, though. Usually, by claiming that being a member of a charity or patient group reduced your chance of recovery.
These assumptions were based on results of questionnaires given out at ME centres. They found that people who were members of self-help group showed less improvement than those who were not. The psychs who support CBT etc. assumed, with their usual persecution complex, that this was due to patients being warned off the therapies, and having nothing but contempt for psychiatric conditions.They have attacked being members of self-help groups as they claim this will only reinforce symptoms.
Does David know that?Sharpe said:Btw I think David Tuller invented the term false illness beliefs.
Does David know that?
Yes, my thought exactly.This feels like public group CBT.
being in a support group would make them less susceptible to being influenced to change their questionnaire responses - sounds about right to meThese assumptions were based on results of questionnaires given out at ME centres. They found that people who were members of self-help group showed less improvement than those who were not. The psychs who support CBT etc. assumed, with their usual persecution complex, that this was due to patients being warned off the therapies, and having nothing but contempt for psychiatric conditions.
Of course, there are always other explanations, and a proper study would have considered them all. One obvious one is simply that all that was offered at these ME centres was a talking therapy, part of which was to help patients understand the condition, to accept the need for careful pacing, and to avoid boom and bust. If, in the long time leading up to the specialist appointment, patients joined support groups, they would have had access to all of this. By the time they got to see a specialist, they would already be adjusting to the condition.
This presumption of persecution was repeated in Chalder's analysis of key factors in improvement in the PACE trial, where again, membership of support groups was assumed to have a negative effect.
According to Google, the earliest mention I've found so far of "false illness beliefs" is from November 2003 by a certain David Jameson (ahum!).
“Because patients with comorbid psychiatric disorders were excluded, it is still possible that kinesiophobia is important in comorbid patients. This might explain why kinesiophobia, as measured purely by self-reported questionnaires, was found to be important in two previous studies that did include comorbid patients…Our data suggest exercise phobia is unlikely to be a maintaining factor in CFS alone, without the presence of a comorbid disorder. The other contrast with previous work is that we used objective rather than subjective measures of avoidance and arousal.”
“The results from the psychological measures lend support to some of the perpetuating factors suggested by the cognitive–behavioural model for CFS being related to mood and somatic focusing”
“We conclude that CFS, without a comorbid psychiatric disorder, probably is not an exercise phobia, and fear avoidance is perhaps less important in CFS than chronic pain disorders [11]. The cognitive behaviour model may need to be adapted to include beliefs and interoceptive sensitivity for avoiding activity [40].”
Ok, I'll throw a wild one out there, could he have been a reviewer of the paper? Correct me if I'm wrong but the list of reviewers is still unknown and not being an author he would have been eligible? Probably me being too cynical.