To quote from Benita Kane on Bluesky cited by @Trish
would we have seen even ten years ago this level of response in the BMJ to an article by such BPS grandees.
I suspect their actual reach is pretty small, but they do serve as an important record of wide dissent and opposition to the opinion piece at the time it was published. This is why it's great to see such a wide variety of responses.Since a lot of good rapid responses here, I’m wondering, what kind of reach do rapid responses have?
Very good. Thank you for being willing to share your experience. I think spell out GET in words, as not all readers will be familiar with it.Hi all, popping back up to ask for feedback on my rapid response, I'm not sure I've struck the right tone but I thought maybe the sort of patient experience perspective will be valuble.
Hi all, popping back up to ask for feedback on my rapid response, I'm not sure I've struck the right tone but I thought maybe the sort of patient experience perspective will be valuble.
Most of the medical profession stand by them. It makes it easy for them to ignore it all.Obviously this is not the case, but despite the repeated precedents from PACE onwards of BPS advocates incapacity to understand or acknowledge incontrovertible critiques, I still can not understand such wilful blindness.
I’ll never stop blaming them because they should know better. And they should listen to the patients that tell them they have got it all wrong.Over time I blame them less and less. Their behavior is appalling, but they wouldn't behave this way if they didn't get all this recognition and positive reinforcement. It isn't just that the ideologues should be able to see through this, everyone in the profession should and is capable of it. But instead they all sing the praise of the emperor's wonderful magical robe.
It's one of those cases where since everyone is guilty, then it's impossible to assign specific blame to anyone.I’ll never stop blaming them because they should know better. And they should listen to the patients that tell them they have got it all wrong.
I understand there are mechanisms that facilitate the behaviour that we observe, but I have a hard time seeing how that absolves them of both their accountability and responsibility.
Without further comparisons, it happened after WWII. Not everyone, for practical reasons, but people were held accountable for specific actions. And not just the killers in camps, co-operators were also punished, like those owning the printing shops that fulfilled orders to produce propaganda. So I don’t think it’s impossible to assign individual blame just because the system is also messed up.It's one of those cases where since everyone is guilty, then it's impossible to assign specific blame to anyone.
Yet also with world war two, there was near zero consequences to the medical professionals and psychiatrists who spearheaded Aktion T4 and it’s later variants (the genocide of disabled people). In fact many of these people, especially psychiatrists, continued long careers with many accolades. Only around ~20 people were ever convicted. Given the tens of thousands of people heavily involved and the systemic nature, the tiny number of convictions are probably more about politics and image than genuine punishment or reform.Without further comparisons, it happened after WWII. Not everyone, for practical reasons, but people were held accountable for specific actions. And not just the killers in camps, co-operators were also punished, like those owning the printing shops that fulfilled orders to produce propaganda. So I don’t think it’s impossible to assign individual blame just because the system is also messed up.
There’s certainly a lot that could have been handled differently afterwards. My point was mostly that some people have been held accountable, so it’s not unreasonable to have an expectation or desire that others will as well in the aftermath of this just because the system is also completely broken. So some should, but not everyone will, be held accountable.Yet also with world war two, there was near zero consequences to the medical professionals and psychiatrists who spearheaded Aktion T4 and it’s later variants (the genocide of disabled people). In fact many of these people, especially psychiatrists, continued long careers with many accolades.
The whole thing was majorly swept under the rug. And is still an afterthought if mentioned at all in history lessons and books. Even though it lead to 250000+ murders. And even though much of the techniques used in the holocaust (gas chambers etc), were first used at an industrial scale against disabled people. And on top of that, books, media, articles nearly always refer to it by its original nazi euphemism “forced euthanasia”, instead of mass murder or genocide.
And of course they mention Maeve who died in 2021 before the new guideline was confirmed so under the old regime of ‘treatment’ , and they know that full wellI'm mildly annoyed that no one has pointed out that the approach they are marketing has literally been the standard approach for 2 decades, and that despite a needed update to the NICE guideline, it is still. It hasn't just been tried, it is still the actual standard approach. Not a de facto informal model, it is the currently officially implemented model, regardless of the small bits of concession to reality.
They are literally proposing the current treatment model than one can read all over UK medical sources, including from the NHS. No one has pointed it out clearly enough, how insane it is to present the current way of doing things as some new never-before-tried idea when it's literally identical to the original construct made up by Wessely and his pals.
It would amount to seriously proposing that drugs should be illegal, because the current approach where drugs are sold freely and openly has failed.
But I don't have the brain power to write something formal.
Maybe avoid «always» and use «often» to avoid an easy counter-argument?'Furthermore, the so-called biopsychosocial approach is always presented as a new and cutting-edge approach
Another rapid response. From David Putrino and 18 others:
Patients with severe ME/CFS need hope in the form of evidence-based interventions, not opinions.
I’ve not managed to keep up with all the developments in research, so please correct me if I’m wrong, but I’m not aware of any replicated studies which show that PEM is a measurable biological phenomenon.PEM is not a belief; it is a measurable biological phenomenon
I think this slightly misrepresents why NICE revised the Guideline. As far a as I recall, the primary reason for NICE withdrawing its recommendation of GET and CBT was because there was no reliable evidence that they are effective, as well as evidence of potential harm.Ignoring PEM and promoting increased activity without accounting for it has been shown to worsen patient outcomes.[2] This is why the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) revised its guidelines in 2021 to advise against Graded Exercise Therapy and to clarify that CBT is not a curative treatment, but may be helpful as a supportive adjunct
I’m sure that is true, but again I’m not sure we know enough about the pathophysiology to make that claim.PEM is a core requirement for diagnosis of ME/CFS and is pathophysiologically distinct from fatigue
I’m not as knowledgeable about the science as many other on here but again I’m not sure these claims are currently supported by reliable data.There is now a substantial and growing body of evidence pointing to measurable abnormalities in immune, metabolic, neurological, and cardiovascular function in people with ME/CFS. [8,9,10]