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New Zealand: Dr Vallings

Discussion in 'Other clinics and doctors' started by Hutan, Nov 12, 2018.

  1. Lidia

    Lidia Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    155
    I just don’t know which part of my daughter’s personality is related to ME and which part is related to her being a Virgo. It is so confusing.

    Especially because she was only 5, and was always very neat with the crayons.
     
  2. obeat

    obeat Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    682
    It's strange how perfectionism is always seen as a negative feature. If I need cardiac surgery, I hope my surgeon would be a " perfectionist". I hope that the engineering team behind building a bridge are " perfectionists" ......
     
  3. Mithriel

    Mithriel Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    2,816
    Before CFS, there was a general acknowledgement that ME often happened to people who were not able to rest when they were ill. This was in the context of a time when convalescence after illness was being phased out and was used as an argument that people should not be forced back to work too quickly after an infection.

    It was felt that someone who was lazy and did not force themselves would not get ME. This is quite close to type A personality and perfectionism could lead to someone ignoring their health to finish a job, but not exactly. What were reasonable concerns - people not being able to recover from illness because of outside pressures and the need to prove that ME was not just another word for layabout, have been distorted into airy nonsense that has been shown for what it is by Derren Brown!

    Recall bias can be distorted as well; it is too easy to read that as people with ME fooling themselves into believing they were "good" when they weren't.

    The basic problem is that personality in ME is being used as a moral judgement instead of a practical issue. There is a risk of chronic ill health if the body is not allowed to recover (sickness behaviour rules!) and there are biochemical energy issues which mean we cannot function properly. These are just facts of the illness.

    I can't believe that anyone is using psychoanalytical ideas from 1934 to talk about a biomedical disease in 2018.
     
  4. Sly Saint

    Sly Saint Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    yes, and you would hope that the ME 'experts' were as well, particularly the ones doing 'research'....:rolleyes:
     
  5. NelliePledge

    NelliePledge Moderator Staff Member

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    Location:
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    I’m not a perfectionist at all I pretty much blagged my degree by last minute revision of some likely topics despite missing loads of lectures and not doing coursework that wasn’t compulsory.
    I have a high mess tolerance and limited interest in housework. In my career I worked hard but compared to people I’ve worked with who were true perfectionist workaholics I am nowhere near. Neither am I excitable other than when watching my football team. I was even described as a placid child by my mum.

    This personality type stuff is ridiculous. Of course she sees driven people they are the ones that are driven enough to push limits to go to see her. Sportspeople know they have a window in which to achieve in their sporting fields and are used to seeking medical support when injured so much more likely to seek early help with chronic Illness than someone like me. I’m not a psychologist or a scientist or medic but that is blatantly obvious to me.
     
  6. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    12,461
    Location:
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    "Type A" personalities that are high achievers but also afraid of exercise and malingering and confused over normal bodily senses.

    It would be great if the people involved started thinking about how this will all look once we have a research breakthrough. They're really focused on short-term obsessing about something that will be proven 100% wrong.

    Just need to look at all the past research on a psychosomatic model of any other disease. It exists only in archives, failure exemplified and of no practical value whatsoever.
     
    Sisyphus, Woolie, TrixieStix and 18 others like this.
  7. MEMarge

    MEMarge Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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  8. Invisible Woman

    Invisible Woman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I am no expert on the topic of personality types so I am likely to be displaying significant ignorance here and if so please excuse me.

    Is the "science" or definition of personality types anywhere near tight enough or defined enough to be used in this way?

    Take for example the "perfectionist". Surely there are different types of perfectionist?

    Let's say:
    1. Someone who through childhood adversity of some type became driven to succeed in their chosen field. In areas outside their focus they may not be quite so driven or may be driven out of habit.

    2. Someone who doesn't feel good enough and feels that nothing they do is good enough and so they keep trying harder.

    3. Someone whose job seems to depend on them to being driven and precise and pushing the boundaries of knowledge, but actually they just do what they can.

    All 3 could potentially be described as perfectionists or have that attribute ascribed to them. Yet they are all very different. So, if being a perfectionist or being described as one by someone else were to include all three, would this attribute have the same effect on their bodies and physical health?

    Is there any proof that being a "perfectionist" has any actual effect on someone's physical health?

    Edited - spelling.
     
    Hutan, Woolie, andypants and 10 others like this.
  9. Snowdrop

    Snowdrop Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    2,134
    Location:
    Canada
    And I'm so pissed off by this kind of nonsense that I'm going to be cheeky and label the people who produce/spew this kind nonsense type F personality. And who's to say I'm wrong? After all, it doesn't require actual scientific fact finding. I just need to believe and voila it is so.
     
    Hutan, Arnie Pye, Woolie and 17 others like this.
  10. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    Aotearoa New Zealand
    That's a really interesting reference Lucibee. Gosh, those RA patients must be annoying neurotics with a tendency to militancy as well then.

    I like the way an assessment of restriction on activities is classified as 'social adjustment'.
    (Edit, for the avoidance of doubt, that was irony - many people reading the term 'social adjustment' would assume it means how well adjusted the person is in a social sense - but it's quite a problematic concept when it's physical symptoms that restrict our activities.)
     
    Last edited: Nov 14, 2018
  11. Ravn

    Ravn Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    2,062
    Location:
    Aotearoa New Zealand
    Oh @Hutan, how exasperating that must have been for you to sit and listen through that! But thank you for reporting and venting. Your venting makes a lot more sense than any of that earnest personality type babble.

    And if the person who challenged that personality type babble at the meeting is reading this, thank you, too.

    Even if personality type was a risk factor (and I'm skeptical), surely it would be similar to most genetic risk factors. Having the risk factor means you have a somewhat elevated risk of getting a certain disease. It doesn't mean everybody with the risk factor will actually get the disease, most will not. And someone without the risk factor can still get the disease. So really, you are no further ahead for any practical purpose.
     
  12. TiredSam

    TiredSam Committee Member

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    10,496
    Location:
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    I would like to suggest type FFS personality.

    I don't even accept that there is an effective way to categorise personality types, or that they are fixed or particularly meaningful. I can be as lazy as anyone, on the other hand I can be very driven and hard-working for sustained long periods. Then I can be very lazy again. It all depends whether I can be arsed doing something or not. What category is that, and do I have to stay in it once I've been classified? I can be friendly and sociable. Or I can be taciturn, grumpy and hard work to have a conversation with. Depends on what mood I'm in and a host of other factors, including whether I'm being paid or not.
     
  13. inox

    inox Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    539
    Location:
    Norway
    Jelstad wrote up this post, after a talk Wyller gave on ME in 2014, about among other things ME and personality types. He was introduced by Ulrik Fredrik Malt, a professor in psychiatry and strong BPS and MUS-proponent.

    The post have sourced information about studies on personality studies in other illnesses. And puts the studies on personality in ME into context.

    His main argument is - the studies on ME and personality, people with ME are compared to healthy people. But when you compare with results from personality studies in other illnesses, it's similar. So the studies are likely measuring the effects of beeing ill. (and the science is generally low quality)


    (Painted = Malt, his surname, if the translation looks a bit wonky, and fresh = healthy)

    https://debortgjemte.com/2014/10/26/finnes-det-en-me-personlighet/

    https://www.microsofttranslator.com/bv.aspx?from=&to=en&refd=www.microsofttranslator.com&rr=UC&a=https://debortgjemte.com/2014/10/26/finnes-det-en-me-personlighet/



     
    Last edited: Nov 17, 2018
  14. Snowdrop

    Snowdrop Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    2,134
    Location:
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    Couldn't agree more. How we respond to the world is fluid and situational within some broad parameter.
    These assessments are a sledgehammer. No nuance as per a real person. And it's all nonsense IMO.
     
  15. Little Bluestem

    Little Bluestem Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    1,450
    Because that is what she expects to see in her clinic. :banghead:

    If I said what I am really thinking I might be banned from the forum.


    Me too! :D
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 18, 2018
  16. alex3619

    alex3619 Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I second this motion. :ninja:
     
  17. alex3619

    alex3619 Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    There is a high risk of confirmation bias. If you think something is the case, and you look for confirmation, you might often find it. That is why scientists, good ones anyway, look for disconfirmation, contradictions, etc., rather than support.
     
  18. alex3619

    alex3619 Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    2,143
    I used to be a perfectionist, but I learned many other ways of responding to things. I no longer consider myself a perfectionist in most things, most of the time. So if there is a personality type, what does it mean if your personality type changes?

    My motto might have once been if its worth doing its worth doing right. Now my motto would be something like its OK to just do enough to get by.
     
  19. chrisb

    chrisb Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    4,602
    That would make you one of the Freely Fluctuating Sort.

    I presume that is what FFS stood for.
     
  20. Snow Leopard

    Snow Leopard Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    3,827
    Location:
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    From memory, Wessely has commented that retrospective studies are necessarily inconclusive too...
     

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