Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
In my country, there seems to be a lot less people employed offering CBT or graded exercise therapy or similar for ME/CFS. And those that do don't generally have the status within medicine as an official NHS-type clinic.there are enough people in the UK who pay (either directly or if they have private insurance) for CBT/GET with the likes of Optimum Health and who pay for Lightning and all the other BS to make a nice living for all the purveyorsDolphin said:The NHS has a lot of positives about it.
But I think a reasonable argument can be made that the way it works has facilitated CBT and GET to become so dominant.
Because nobody pays anything including co-payments, patient preference is less important. If some patients were paying something, it would be clear that the CBT and GET services weren't popular and they might not survive. In some other health systems, there would less chance of fiefdoms for people like Peter White & Simon Wessely. The ME experts in the US offer something quite different to the NHS clinics.
A likely big effect of more money for the NHS over the last 10 years for ME/CFS would probably have been that people would have been discharged less quickly from the local services with more CBT/graded exercise therapy/graded activity therapy sessions. And severely affected people would have had more therapists coming to their homes offering CBT and graded activity therapy.
Also, just because people with ME/CFS pay for lightning process doesn't mean they'll pay for CBT or GET.