I don’t know. But I do think plenty of people get worse care if they give the doctors a lot of hassle.
My problem with this is I went out of my way (and still do) to not be ‘one of those’ patients. I have spent a decade giving medics every opportunity to give me the basics. And yet…
I can see the argument that people who are better than me but shout a lot of woo make it worse for all of us. I can see the argument that people who spout woo may make it worse for themselves.
But the problem is, the idea that giving doctors no hassle gets us better care, is simply not the case. And doctors have to take responsibility for that.
That is not my experience
But it is mine. And that of others. I have never claimed any woo and yet have been told there is nothing wrong with me, denied very basic support, referred for psychological support, etc.
I think there’s an element here of two things being true at once. The woo from patients and advocates is not helpful. The woo from the medical establishment is not helpful. But in working to stop the former I think any hint of patient blame for the latter or any idea that it is the patients responsible for the failing of the medical service is unhelpful too.
That may be hard for some to hear but they need to.
People with ME/CFS have been blamed for our own illness for years, blaming for not getting better, so blaming us for the failings of others now is unhelpful.
As
@V.R.T. said “Plenty of people with other serious chronic illnesses have woo beliefs. They aren't denied basic care and treatment and research.”
I have family and friends who have had serious diseases and gone down all sorts of weird treatments but they have never been denied NHS care. They’ve sometimes shunned it, but usually it’s been accepting the NHS stuff and the alternative stuff. There’s a huge amount of that in the UK.
People who abuse their bodies from food, drink, drugs to extreme sports, none are denied care like we are. That is on the medical establishment not us.
There’s possibly a matter of perspective here too. Jonathan comes into contact with more representatives and advocates pushing these ideas. Most of us have more history of problems from medical institutions we once trusted.
We need to stop the woo from all. Let’s focus on that.