Valerie Eliot Smith blog on draft
https://valerieeliotsmith.com/2020/...TjuXT7-isNWf38t8DDpSMbLYL8DOltfxBgQP_pIjXdlYU
https://valerieeliotsmith.com/2020/...TjuXT7-isNWf38t8DDpSMbLYL8DOltfxBgQP_pIjXdlYU
Regarding the nausea section, I don't think specific recommendations should be made, it should just say that GPs and consultants should offer the same treatments for symptomatic relief as they would in any other condition (sorry, just the concept, I am out of oomph to be able to word this correctly).
The trouble is, the converse could be true for other patients. They might find that eating 3 regular meals helps reduce their nausea. In another part of the guideline it states there is no evidence to recommend a restrictive diet, but these also help some patients. So really, I think some of these 'patient suggestions' (which are not part of the submitted formal patient survey evidence) should be left to patient support groups or forums, rather than being in guidelines that are written for healthcare professionals. NICE guidelines are not intended to be primarily designed to give idiosyncratic advice or cover every management tip that could be helpful to every patient. The final version needs to be internally consistent if it is to be taken seriously by doctors and consultants.but the fact it mentions eating smaller meals, spread out throughout the day - is a really good piece of advice, I only learned this after joining a few PoTS groups and finding out about gastroparesis. That could help lots of PwME.
The trouble is, the converse could be true for other patients. They might find that eating 3 regular meals helps reduce their nausea. In another part of the guideline it states there is no evidence to recommend a restrictive diet, but these also help some patients. So really, I think some of these 'patient suggestions' (which are not part of the submitted formal patient survey evidence) should be left to patient support groups or forums, rather than being in guidelines that are written for healthcare professionals. NICE guidelines are not intended to be primarily designed to give idiosyncratic advice or cover every management tip that could be helpful to every patient. The final version needs to be internally consistent if it is to be taken seriously by doctors and consultants.
However, when it comes to being prescribed symptomatic relief medications, patients depend completely on the medical profession to be able to access prescription drugs. So this information does need to be covered in the guidelines or we risk being left with severe symptoms, pain, nausea, headaches etc., that could be alleviated with the correct meds. For some patients being denied symptomatic relief could lead to them choosing suicide as a way out of their suffering.
I take your point, although I have never heard of anyone with ME who has said I have really bad nausea, but eating three big full meals actually helps me with that. I suppose it could happen, but It’s extremely unlikely, given that even on the NHS website the recommendations for nausea are to drink regular small sips and also to eat small spread out meals. Nausea is one example.
But I gave many others in my other post. In addition to those, I’ve just gone through the guidelines and found even more sections which say committee experience was used in making the decisions - sometimes in more than one place - including principles of care for people with ME/CFS, suspecting ME/CFS and maintaining independence.
So if S4ME want to say the problem is with committee experience, and it should only ever used in places where otherwise the patient would come to great harm- it is going to have to go over with a fine tooth comb - every piece of advice in the guidelines and check every bit to see if it says committee experience is used, then figure out what to do about it, put together a submission which argues patients really would come to harm if these pieces of advice didn’t happen (under the “do no harm” principle) and argue that’s why these should stay despite saying committee experience. So I really am sceptical using this argument is going to be helpful in general, not to mention something really important could get taken out, and people here don’t actually know that it won’t - since no one has actually gone over it with a fine tooth comb yet. I really don’t think this is a good idea.
However, when it comes to being prescribed symptomatic relief medications, patients depend completely on the medical profession to be able to access prescription drugs. So this information does need to be covered in the guidelines or we risk being left with severe symptoms, pain, nausea, headaches etc., that could be alleviated with the correct meds. For some patients being denied symptomatic relief could lead to them choosing suicide as a way out of their suffering.
Lovely.With the counsellor and some others I have seen before I might as well have been talking to Alexa.
Kirsten is correct. A huge problem with this draft is that the vast majority of the current crop of ME 'clinical experts' in the UK are so compromised by their track records it is impossible to have any faith that they will deliver what is required.
Surely admitting the system has failed badly, which is what this draft guidelines doing in effect, requires a lot of new people to be brought in, especially at the top. Diagnosis and management of ME needs to be rebuilt from the ground up. In its current form it is simply too compromised and bloated with incompetence and bad faith. How can we trust those same people to deliver? We cannot.
Why should these clowns be rewarded for their decades of grotesque and obvious failure and dishonesty?
Many excellent points.“Loopholes Need Closing” – ME/CFS Draft Guideline Community Discussion
https://www.meaction.net/2020/11/18...-me-cfs-draft-guideline-community-discussion/
Yes and no. To be diagnosed with current definitions requires at least a 50% reduction in activity capacity, which is already very badly affected, devastating even. That might be fine for a tighter research definition trying to get a clean sample, but not for one used in the practical world of the clinic, and medico-legal and policy advice. There are going to be less affected people who don't reach that arbitrary 50% cutoff but still need recognition and some help. We need to be careful we do not exclude them.The descriptors of severity of ME needs to be revised to emphasise that what is defined as ‘mild’ in the guideline is still very debilitating. “ME is devastating at all levels. It is a horrendous disease all the time.”
Following on from my previous comment, I would go with: mild, moderate, severe, and extremely severe (or just extreme). There will be a lot of mild patients out there who are being misdiagnosed, or missed completely by the health system.Instead, they suggested four severity levels of moderate, severe, very severe and extremely severe.
When these practitioners talk about "central sensitization" they're not at all talking what you're talking about! Its a new(ish) euphemism for "psychosomatic", and refers to the idea that there is nothing in your periphery that can explain of your pain/fatigue/malaise; they are somehow constructed in your central nervous system (mainly your brain) through learning. They are therefore amenable to change by behavioral interventions.I have heard this reference to central sensitisation in pain and maybe fatigue.
Have people had this response widely in clinics?
It will definitely be a good question for the PSP, ie what biomedical evidence is there that PwME have increased sensitivity to peripheral and central sensations.
For me the inflammation of dorsal root ganglia from post -mortem studies gives a physiological explanation for the extreme magnification of touch/smell/sound etc in people with severe ME.
Edit:typo
“Loopholes Need Closing” – ME/CFS Draft Guideline Community Discussion
https://www.meaction.net/2020/11/18...-me-cfs-draft-guideline-community-discussion/
The descriptors of severity of ME needs to be revised to emphasise that what is defined as ‘mild’ in the guideline is still very debilitating. “ME is devastating at all levels. It is a horrendous disease all the time.”
Instead, they suggested four severity levels of moderate, severe, very severe and extremely severe.
I thought the whole idea of severity levels was about levels of disability/ loss of ability to carry out normal daily activities. Along with those, symptoms are likely to become more severe too as the illness becomes more severe, but not necessarily in an obvious linear fashion.The more I think about these severity level labels the more I think they should be scrapped altogether.
They can be applied to the individual symptoms as per most other illnesses eg pain, fatigue
but as an overall label they can be misleading.
I would like to see a disability scale similar to that used in MS adapted for use with ME
https://mstrust.org.uk/a-z/expanded-disability-status-scale-edss
To my engineering brain this just feels like common sense. For any one person, each kind of activity (using that word loosely) will have a given energy limit at any given time. If you could do a multi-dimensional graph, one dimension for each activity, with the limit of each activity marked, then they would all mark out a person's energy envelope at any given time, the envelope marking the various limits for the various activities. The envelope would vary, as the person's energy limits changed.In case it’s of interest, the Leonard Jason team have published some studies of various sizes which found evidence for the energy envelope approach
Fully agree. Somewhere else in these threads (sorry, lost the plot where) I've said that the guideline should make very clear that whenever it refers to ME/CFS therapists/experts, it should very clearly state that those therapists must be fully conversant with, full trained in accordance with, and fully adhere to, this new guideline. Otherwise it will be a cakewalk for the old guard on business as usual whilst just paying lip service to the new guideline.Then, when you add in who these therapists "with lots of experience working with ME/CFS patients" are, then it will likely be those who've been gasslighting us for years.