Unbelievable. But then kind of believable too.
I've said this before but I think it's worth repeating.Science for ME commended their efforts and the resulting guideline, saying, "we believe it will lead to significant improvements in the care and support for the estimated 250,000 people in England and Wales with ME/CFS.
For example this study (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21794183/) gives a prevalence of 0.19% based on the CDC 1994 criteria which I don't classify as being real ME. Even with that too broad criteria that would make only 129,865 ME patients in the UK, just under half of population @Hutan claimed had ME.
Inflating the numbers is really bad for credibility of real ME patients. If there are over 100,000 misdiagnosed as having ME all claiming exercise didn't worsen their condition or even led to improvement, it's going to make us sound like delusional conspiracy theorists.
I searched lots of ways to estimate the numbers, and tied it in with estimates of rates of incidence combined with a negligible recovery rate. This was in another thread, and @Trish helped me out with the sums. I would reckon on around 150,000 patients in the UK: perhaps even as low as 120,000. The study that used three GP practices to estimate prevalence struck me as being the most realistic.
I think it is a name for what the Torbay and South Devon service seem to have been doing under the 2007 guidelines. I haven't even been able to read through their patient 'manual', it is so long and detailed it is exhausting in itself and what it appears to be requiring patients to do is micromanage every aspect of their lives (grading every activity and what is done every half hour). 'Barmy' is all I can say. It's all about fatigue management, no other ME symptoms are even mentioned. They've taken the 'battery' analogy and raised it to the level of the physiological explanation of ME itself. In this sense, I can see that the 'dysregulation model' is the 'safer' one for ME patients as at least it recognises complexity happening.I'm still hung up on the idea that activity management needs to be 'graded'. and what sort of person would think this is better than 'activity management' advice.
There is a guideline on ME/CFS being prepared in the Netherlands and the plan was to take the NICE guideline as a starting point.
Stop bragging everyone will be trying to get blocked --- badge of honour!
All the usual caveats about needing expert legal advice on a case by case basis apply ! But - yes the Guideline does not trump clinical freedom. However if harm is demonstrable (which of course it may not be to a legal standard) then the Guideline would serve as a sort of negative indicator of clinician competence - "why go outside the Guideline if harm was likely and the probability of benefit low ?" etc.As the NICE guidelines are classed I believe as advisory and not binding, would this weaken citing them in any court case by an individual claiming harm by being prescribed GET?
Section: “Who is it for”. Comment: It is our opinion that there is not sufficient information in this guideline to support the listed professionals to deliver an intervention
Yes, they are aware that this is the next challenge and are working on it.Are patient orgs working together on this yet?
bacme> ...provide further understanding of the underlying pathological processes that generate the symptoms experienced by people with ME/CFS in the hope this will also lead to more refined therapeutic approaches.