The Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine
This is a rare and exciting opportunity to join the RLHIM, Europe's largest public-sector provider of integrated medicine. We provide an innovative patient-centred service integrating the best of conventional and complimentary approaches. This role forms an integral part of our Chronic Fatigue, and Fibromyalgia pathways, delivering a range of self-care strategies for patients with complex needs living with these ongoing conditions. Your role will involve unsupervised lone working, so we expect you to be confident and highly experienced.
https://healthjobs.bmj.com/job/197436/highly-specialist-occupational-therapist/Experience
Essential
- Experience of using highly specialist knowledge of occupational therapy skills to treat chronic fatigue and chronic widespread pain.
- Experience of working within an MDT setting in the NHS.
- Experience of using patient-reported outcome measures.
- Experience of managing own caseload effectively.
- Previous experience regarding quality standard setting, audit and evaluation.
- Experience of delivering group based programmes
- Advanced skills in the assessment and treatment of people with complex multi-pathologies in line with NICE and RCOT guidelines
I really don't know what to make of it all.
I've just been seen at RLHIM and have finally got a diagnosis of CFS and Fibromyalgia. It was quite a long phone appointment with lots of scientific guff I couldn't understand. A lot of it sounded like pure quackery to be honest. And now I've been sent on my way with referrals for Physio, CBT and Acupuncture. I really don't know what to make of it all.
I've just been seen at RLHIM and have finally got a diagnosis of CFS and Fibromyalgia. It was quite a long phone appointment with lots of scientific guff I couldn't understand. A lot of it sounded like pure quackery to be honest. And now I've been sent on my way with referrals for Physio, CBT and Acupuncture. I really don't know what to make of it all.
no they shouldn’tGive the NICE guidelines should an English institution that is part of the NHS be making a diagnosis of CFS rather than ME/CFS?
It's a disgrace. And I am sorry that it has happened in my university centre.
RLHIM made it clear that they were just going to do their own sort of quackery in a mission statement not long back. How it is justified within the NHS I have no idea.
Ahaaa I think your instincts are right about some of it being pure quackery.
Don't feel any pressure to go through with any of those referrals if they feel too useless to you. Which doctor did you see? We can chat more on private messages if that's better
Give the NICE guidelines should an English institution that is part of the NHS be making a diagnosis of CFS rather than ME/CFS?
If the NHS is funding "Physio, CBT and Acupuncture" i.e. for MECFS/contrary to NICE Guidelines then surely they are not using NHS funding as intended? I'd suggest contacting the UK charities i.e. asking them to raise a query with NHS England - NHS funding provider.I've just been seen at RLHIM and have finally got a diagnosis of CFS and Fibromyalgia. It was quite a long phone appointment with lots of scientific guff I couldn't understand. A lot of it sounded like pure quackery to be honest. And now I've been sent on my way with referrals for Physio, CBT and Acupuncture. I really don't know what to make of it all.
My brain was so scrambled by all the nonsense he was spewing that I didn't have the energy to challenge him. Also, as I have co-morbid Anxiety and Depression, I was worried that he might try to lump everything under mental health, so I was kinda just happy to get any diagnosis.
It is so hard both to deal with the stress of such situations and the inherent power imbalance. My comment was not intended as a suggestion you should take action @BazzaBoyle , rather it was directed at the wider forum as a discussion point. At the time all you can do is focus on achieving you main objective, ie getting a usable diagnosis. Sorry if my comment felt like additional pressure.
I get what you’re saying @BazzaBoyle about doing the recommended treatment so it doesn’t mean you’ve got negative letters on your medical record with a view to dealings with DWP. I did the CFS clinic course in 2016 so my employer couldn’t say I wasn’t getting available treatment & had to give me time to try to get back to work.
I would make 2 points from my experience.
If they (therapists you’re working with) expect you to do stuff that’s too much you don’t have to actually do what they suggest. And you don’t have to tell them you didn’t or only did a bit of it. Some white lies to preserve yourself are valid in a situation that’s verging on coercion.
second be alert that underlying all of the old approach not just anything tagged as exercise or physio is getting people to do more activity overall it’s not always obvious though. In fact just adding those appointments on to a normal week is an increase in activity. I had to reduce other activity (part time work) to be able to do the course day.
Stuff about setting your personal priorities and making a plan to do stuff towards those priorities is one to watch out for. Decluttering my house was my priority - I did do some at first but dropped it without alerting the therapist
I did keep attending the course without doing any more than that and a letter to the GP went to say that I’d completed it.
eta I did the decluttering a couple of months later on my own pace when I had got back to my normal after attending the course
@livinglighter has posted - this may be a bit of the jigsaw I'm missing - e.g. you haven't been diagnosed with MECFS and therefore, fall within another NICE Guideline [which recommends "Physio, CBT and Acupuncture"]?
It is deliberate obfuscation. One of their oldest and most persistent and effective tactics.It now comes across to me as if some health professionals are diagnosing, treating and communicating about a completely different illness.
In order to treat, someone they need to fall within a descriptor and that descriptor needs to have a treatment pathway. I'd be inclined to ask the UK charities to get to the bottom of this.It now comes across to me as if some health professionals are diagnosing, treating and communicating about a completely different illness.