Sly Saint
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Irish ME patients hope HSE will follow UK and scrap exercise therapy guidance
https://www.thejournal.ie/me-exercise-5590653-Nov2021/
@Tom Kindlon
@Brian Hughes
Irish ME patients hope HSE will follow UK and scrap exercise therapy guidance
IRISH PATIENTS WITH Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) have said they are hopeful that the HSE will change its treatment guidance following fresh advice issued by a UK watchdog.
The new guidance addressed the use of exercise therapy programmes, which representatives have argued can worsen symptoms for patients, and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), which experts have said was being used as “a cure” rather than a support measure.
In recent weeks the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellent (NICE) published updated guidelines on the diagnosis and management of ME/CFS. It stated that any programme based on fixed incremental increases in exercise, such as graded exercise therapy (GET), should not be offered.
The health standards body also issued fresh guidance on the use of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), stating that it has sometimes “been assumed to be a cure for ME/CFS”.
The new guidance recommends it should only be offered to support people who live with ME/CFS to “manage their symptoms, improve their functioning and reduce the distress associated with having a chronic illness”.
Speaking to TheJournal, Declan Carroll of the Irish ME Trust said the treatment guidance for ME/CFS in Ireland is similar to that of the UK and his organisation is hoping the HSE will now follow the UK’s lead.
“The current treatment approach of graded exercise and CBT is not one we would have supported as an organisation,” he said.
“The graded exercise programme was really to encourage people to push through the pain barrier in the same way as a marathon runner pushes through that 20 mile wall. That hasn’t served ME people well at all, they can relapse and suffer longterm problems because of it.
With any longterm chronic condition there is an understanding that people need to be limber and keep their muscles activated, but it shouldn’t be outside their control, they should be in control of it.
He pointed out that the NICE guidance includes ‘post-exertional malaise’ as a criteria for diagnosing ME.
“If that’s one of the criteria then graded exercise can’t be a good remedy in terms of treatment. They probably should have come to this conclusion before now.”
Carroll said representatives had been meeting with the HSE before Covid as part of a working group, but these meetings have not yet recommenced.
https://www.thejournal.ie/me-exercise-5590653-Nov2021/
@Tom Kindlon
@Brian Hughes
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