shall see if I can find one. I found that one searching for 'mad professor'![]()
Could have been drawn with him in mind!
shall see if I can find one. I found that one searching for 'mad professor'![]()
Have to be very careful in case I'm taking this out of context, but as it stands it sounds incredibly amateurish. But of course the full context might be that he is in fact saying that.We did everything we could, in a completely uncontrolled fashion, using antidepressant drugs, and behaviour and cognitive therapy, just to demonstrate that something would work. This enabled us to get funding for a controlled trial.
Come on, we know that. But if it leads to substantial worsening, what should you do? Oh man...to avoid physical and mental activity is counterproductive
"...clinical research should be carried out by those without the inevitable, albeit unconscious, biases caused by suffering from this condition."
biases caused by suffering from this condition
Coz that's worked out soooooo well."...clinical research should be carried out by those without the inevitable, albeit unconscious, biases caused by suffering from this condition."
Has anybody a source for that quote about chronic fatigue and secondary gains and sick role? I simply can't find it.Hi @Valentijn Could you group these quotes in sections with headers so that they are easier to find when looking for something relevant? Eg. Some comments will be about secondary illness gain, some about deconditioning, some about not running tests on patients and so on. Great compilation.
Has anybody a source for that quote about chronic fatigue and secondary gains and sick role? I simply can't find it.
Ah, I remember now...(I hope we mean the same) I checked the thread, and it was about "undeserving patients", something which could refer to Sharpe although I think Wessely might have said something like that, too.
There are some quotes circulating, and I was trying to find the originals. One is about the sick role in chronic fatigue and secondary gains that are linked with it (I found a source for that although I don't know if there's a better quote), which perpetuates the symptoms.
Another one I regularly read about is the one with "undeserving patients", i.e. having a medical or psychiatric diagnosis classifies you as "deserving" (of benefits, treatment...) and the rest (simulants, those that reject psychiatric diagnoses - like viewing ME as physical, not psychological) classifies you as "undeserving". Finding the original quotes is very difficult...
Page LA, Wessely S. Medically unexplained symptoms: exacerbatingWhat are the factors that lead to persistence of MUS in some individuals? Examples of possible precipitating events include chest pain induced by hyperventilation 12 and muscle ache after unaccustomed exercise.13 Some of these
mechanisms may become chronic. Additional psychosocial factors may be ‘secondary gain’10 (for example, when chronic pain spares a parent the burden of caring for a difficult child) or maladaptive psychological coping strategies.14 In this paper, we focus on the adverse effects of medical interventions at various stages of the doctor–
patient encounter.
Henningsen, Management of functional somatic syndromes, Lancet 2007; 369: 946–55, Published Online February 6, 2007 DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)60159-7.Apart from organic comorbidity, maintaining factors have mainly been described on the psychosocial level, such as personality factors that contribute to predisposition, mental comorbidity, a persisting organic illness attribution, and context factors surrounding so-called secondary gain. However, the behaviour of treating physicians also contributes to maintenance and exacerbations of FSS.41
David, Wessely, Pelosi, Postviral fatigue syndrome: time for a new approach, BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL VOLUME 296 5 MARCH 1988.Hysteria itself is an outmoded diagnosis and is being replaced by the concept of "abnormal illness behaviour."
from: http://fumblings.com/weblog/archives/2005/02/the_undeserving_1.html“Purchasers and Health Care providers with hard pressed budgets are understandably reluctant to spend money on patients who are not going to die and for whom there is controversy about the ‘reality’ of their condition (and who) are in this sense undeserving of treatment.
“Those who cannot be fitted into a scheme of objective bodily illness yet refuse to be placed into and accept the stigma of mental illness remain the undeserving sick of our society and our health service”
- “M.E. What do we know (real illness or all in the mind?)” – lecture given in October 1999 by Dr Michael Sharpe hosted by the University of Strathclyde, my emphasis
Although, personally, I think that Sharpe was looking for an excuse, I would like to find a better quote. It's open to interpretation. I'm still reading more articles, but if anyone has something at hand...michael sharpe
OCTOBER 31, 2005 AT 9:37 PM
A very well constructed website. And I agree that patients with CFS and related condition suffer as the undeserving sick of modern society.
But if you read Pygmalion by Bernard Shaw you will understand that that is a criticism of social morals and conventions – not a literal statement!
MS
"What are the factors that lead to persistence of MUS in some individuals? [...] Additional psychosocial factors may be ‘secondary gain’".
"To understand the effects secured by disability, one must appreciate that there are several benefits of the sick role—secondary gains."
Hysteria itself is an outmoded diagnosis and is being replaced by the concept of "abnormal illness behaviour."
It seems to me that the only people who think there are gains to be had from the 'sick role' are people who've never actually been sick for any length of time.