A proper investigation is required because ME is a classified as a neurological condition. The SNOMED CT location says: structure of the nerves.
It’s either that or it’s made up.
Arranging things alphabetically is a sign of OCD. OCD is also part of Bodily Distress Disorder because the patient is also obsessed and distressed by normal bodily sensations such as the normal aches and pains a healthy person feels after exercise, or the ones felt with light exertion if they are deconditioned.
I still don’t think someone could frame themselves so well to include the perfect BPS analogy of a CFS patient.
I meant a proper investigation into whether this type of CBT should ever have been offered and is harmful - doubly bad that the cause is biological. The rest of it notes about false memory scandal - which was huge at the time for the psych world, because it talked of people having false memories 'implanted'. It should have been a cornerstone moment for the profession. All this just reminded me of how those 'concerns' have gone unheeded or old habits of not caring about ethics have crept back in.
Arranging things alphabetically is not 'pathological' ie something that you'd diagnose someone clinically for - or should diagnose them. My point is that if you surveyed the entire population you'd find many more people do this or have done this than are ill with any of these things. I really resent people using such significant terms without good cause for a multitude of reasons.
And what the heck it has to do with ME other than rumour-mongering intended to harm by having people with a serious illness taunted with perfectionism lies on top of bad treatment from medics I don't know. In all the offices I worked there were people who arranged their pens/desks or whatever - maybe 1 in 10, and probably 1 in 50-100 I worked with had ME. There was absolutely no overlap between the two, which is extraordinary given probability not one of the neat-freaks (self-called) also had ME. And yes I think such tropes need to be made clear in any media guides under that term. Certain pieces of work are likely to think they can get away with it more sliding it through supposed 'case studies/personal stories'.
And yes there is a great possibility that this has had quite a bit of input to 'create and shape it' - my curiosity is we don't forget the potential different ways (not forgetting that putting the thoughts into someone's head in the first place is hardly different but actually more disturbing) this could have happened.
What on earth it has to do with ME and a clinic offering medical support for that physiological condition I don't know. Says everything that apparently all they can offer is something for 'mental health' that I personally think actually significantly harms psychologically rather than helps anyway, and they aren't ashamed of that dearth. I think being happy to not reassure people that their only treatment is going to be a fishing expedition for an accusation of perfectionism should be reason to strike off any contracts.
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