Dr Alastair Miller, things to know for anyone being interviewed or engaging with media
BBC, Guardian (links previously posted on this thread) and others describe him as:
an NHS consultant physician in acute medicine and infectious disease in North Cumbria, said exercise programmes could be helpful
Reality: Yes technically his role but entirely unrelated to ME/CFS treatment in North Cumbria or anything else.
Reality: These interviews are misleading because the public will assume there actually ARE doctors treating ME/CFS across the UK - this is not true in North Cumbria, South Cumbria or many other areas.
His context-less quotes are misleading because
- He doesn't work in or have any role in ME/CFS any more and has not for I believe around a decade
- North Cumbria does not have ANY infectious disease specialists in their "specialist ME/CFS service"
- North Cumbria does not have ANY doctors of ANY kind in their "specialist ME/CFS services"
- North Cumbria's ME/CFS service does not diagnose, it used to but they scrapped that, it does not offer any medical advice and does not advise on medication at all (links below)
- South Cumbria does not either have any ME/CFS clinic doctors either, this is probably true of North Lancashire too
- North Cumbria's old ME/CFS and fibromyalgia clinic morphed into a general service a little over 10 years ago, which was then renamed Persistent Physical Symptoms, all treatment was refused unless you agreed to a psych session on the 3Ps
- Persistent Physical Symptoms is now part of the Physical Health Psychology unit, but it is not the part that deals with MS, stroke, or well understood diagnoses
- It is held at community (cottage) hospitals, at least one of which is in the only non-wheelchair accessible part of the hospital - and upstairs.
- Diane L Cox of PACE trial is in this area, and in-patient "rehab" is the North Yorkshire / Leeds BPS hospital unit which published a paper on their "successes" which involved a lot of removing diagnoses. I believe she's an Occupational Therapist. Severe and very severe patients with chronic fatigue syndrome: perceived outcome following an inpatient programme (2000)
So tired of hearing a doctor NOT impacted quoted and of the misleading impression that there are actually doctors involved when there aren't.
I would really like to see Dr Miller challenged on his role within the ME/CFS clinincs at present (he doesn't have one) and asked how many doctors are in his NHS trust for ME/CFS (none). Number of home visits is also zero unless something has dramatically changed.
https://php.cumbria.nhs.uk/
https://php.cumbria.nhs.uk/about-our-services/ppss
https://php.cumbria.nhs.uk/about-ou...lth-and-rehabilitation-psychology/cfs-service
I am unsure how it is ever possible to get media corrections or clarifications when such misleading content is published. I feel the public would feel very differently if they were aware that doctors were not part of these clinics.