It should be available:
from the IAPT Manual:
"
In line with the implementation of The Five Year Forward View for Mental Health, evidence-based treatment will be extended to people with comorbid LTCs or MUS (See Section 11.2). The newly developed IAPT-LTC services will focus on people who have LTCs in the context of depression and anxiety disorders and will also aim to treat the following conditions:
irritable bowel syndrome
chronic fatigue syndrome
MUS not otherwise specified."
"Irritable bowel syndrome*
A common functional gastrointestinal disorder. It is a chronic, relapsing and often lifelong disorder, characterised by the presence of abdominal pain or discomfort associated with defaecation, a change in bowel habit together with disordered defaecation (constipation or diarrhoea or both), the sensation of abdominal distension and may include associated non-colonic symptoms. May cause associated dehydration, lack of sleep, anxiety and lethargy, which may lead to time off work, avoidance of stressful or social situations and significant reduction in quality of life.
Chronic fatigue syndrome*
Comprises a range of symptoms that include fatigue, malaise, headaches, sleep disturbances, difficulties with concentration and muscle pain. A person’s symptoms may fluctuate in intensity and severity, and there is also great variability in the symptoms different people experience. It is characterised by debilitating fatigue that is unlike everyday fatigue and can be triggered by minimal activity. Diagnosis depends on functional impairment and the exclusion of other known causes for the symptoms.
MUS not otherwise specified*
Distressing physical symptoms that do not have an obvious underlying diagnosis and/or pathological process."
"Chronic fatigue syndrome Graded exercise therapy, CBT* NICE guideline: CG53"
on page 30 it has how outcomes are assessed by problem descriptor (so it must be noted somewhere that the person is being 'treated' for CFS)
"Chronic fatigue syndrome PHQ-9 Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire GAD-7 WSAS"
https://www.york.ac.uk/healthsciences/pc-mis/news-articles/IAPT Manual_30OCT17.pdf
"
Problem descriptor
This describes the specific problem being assessed by the IAPT service for a given
referral (for example, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder). The terminology was changed
from ‘provisional diagnosis’ as it was felt that a formal diagnosis cannot always be made
at initial contact with a patient, and that this sometimes only becomes apparent over the
course of several appointments. For this reason, the problem descriptor can be updated
in each submission. In the analysis of outcomes, the problem descriptor used is the last
recorded one."
https://files.digital.nhs.uk/56/88C18F/iapt-month-feb-2018-exec-sum.pdf
And similar information here:
About IAPT services for people with LTCs and MUS
"
treatment choice should be guided by the person’s problem descriptor(s), taking
account of their choice and preferences"
"
Problem descriptor:A way of describing a
person’s presenting mental health problems as assessed by an IAPT service. The descriptor
corresponds with ICD-10 codes and should be based on the nature, severity and duration of
symptoms, and their impact on functionality.
Descriptors are important for identifying the appropriate NICE-recommended intervention.
Services can enter multiple problem descriptors, though the primary problem descriptor should characterise the leading problem and reflect the treatment being delivered."
https://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/IAPT-LTC_short_guide.pdf
also in the above it links to:
https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-inf...ng-access-to-psychological-therapies-data-set
"The Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) Data Set collects information about adults in contact with psychological therapy services".
so the information is there.......unless it's like QMUL where the relevant specialist is not available to extract the data(?)
eta: time for an FOI?