Concentric_Spiral
Established Member (Voting Rights)
Yes, but surely a psychotherapist with a braod enough outlook to be able to make any sensible assessment of someone's needs would be aware of ME/CFS as a disease that poses problems because others do not believe in it. I would have thought anyone who socialises a bit would be aware of that.
The challenge may go beyond knowing that people are skeptical about ME/CFS. Some of it is understanding that the science does not suggest that ME/CFS is psychosomatic, but also as per the passage I quoted above, conventional psychotherapeutic approaches of trying to get clients to push various types of limits (not just physical) can be harmful.
For example, I did a psychotherapy session with an otherwise excellent therapist who wondered if successful therapy could ultimately give me more energy. He was not dismissive in any way, just unaware of how upsetting / triggering that type of comment could be. That's a narrow and obvious example that turns on knowledge of ME/CFS, but my instinct is that there are other guidelines that could be helpful.