I can’t imagine Parkinson’s Disease ever getting renamed…
it's a good bit of lateral thinking there to mention a few other conditions and do the thought experiment of whether there
could be an appropriate and useful alternative for these ie if you put them into the 'naming machine criteria' of today, would what it come out with be OK?
And wouldn't be derogatory or stigmatic. There is at least something grown-up about names where someone in the office could say they have Parkinsons and someone who didn't know it already would have to look up the full information in context. There isn't enough information to 'guess'. It doesn't present a 'label' for the person.
Imagine if something like lupus - which can be vastly different in different people, has times of flares with different symptoms, attacks different organs, and can be atypical - had to be named this way early on. It could present a label that is associated with 'what will happen in the future to someone else', or be giving away some pretty personal information about someone?
And then imagining that
most conditions necessarily start out with not knowing the
cause - although I think that is a red herring used by BPS because technically the cause isn't
known in so many because it's genes, environment etc - or biological mechanisms, to a sure enough extent that name won't change. The nature and point of science is that like the earth goes round the sun vs sun going around the earth things will be all very sure until a new technique shows it's actually not that at all.
Which to be fair is an almost exact example of what CFS is. When you consider whether fatigue, and certainly where certain researchers have taken the description and definition of that currently, doesn't seem accurate.
It isn't that we are 'too tired to do things', it's that 'exertion (both to and by) causes post-exertional malaise' and can lead to deterioration
(deterioration is never mentioned, but I feel it needs to be, and yet I'm aware one reason that will get cited is 'it hasn't been proven': well what 'met the bar for that' with other conditions that might have similar progression if mismanaged?)
Anyway
that distinction is quite significant. And it has underlied a major issue with how we are seen and treated: about how we can be got to do things. And it plays into priming people to see us as 'we seem tired' rather than 'ill'. And the way people would approach someone lethargic vs had flu is quite different.
Is it really technically 'chronic' in the way it is understood: yes, because it is ongoing over someone's lifetime potentially, no because unless you are in rolling PEM and even when you are it isn't some 'consistent entity' - is that what 'chronic pain' is like for example.