a greater emphasis on helping individuals to return to work
My OT negotiated the provision of additional equipment and the ability to deliver some work from home, and swapped a couple of responsibilities that burned a lot of energy to other colleagues (I took on some of their less physically demanding duties in return). She understood that I couldn't do anything at all to change my illness, we could only change the way we did things in order to make the best use of my skills whilst also conserving energy. It kept me in my job for years longer than I would otherwise have managed, resulted in a more efficient workflow in some ways, and even led to the junior colleague who took over one of my roles later getting a promotion. That's absolutely how it should work.
A lot of individual therapists must have built up expertise and knowledge but there does not currently seem to be a forum to share it.
I'm not sure he is: "Sussex ME Society is promoting new guidelines for healthcare professionals produced by the British Association for CFS/ME (BACME)." is very different to accepting the Nice 2021 guidelines.
Maybe he is being politically polite in the 'great service' or maybe it is intended to read as the same service really has the only issue of not also being accessible for severe.
I don't want to jump to conclusions and parse an article because the points of the severe ME/CFS needs will have been written to bear in mind the audience, and he is right on what he has said and used the word 'service providers' (rather than it being a push for a specific clinic to expand). This 'there is literally nothing for the illest' is an important message to have got out to a local audience and one has to laud him for that.
But I'm wary of the 'switch and bait' in the action point (BACME guidelines) - as that is the BPS model trick where they say 'all these things contribute to someone's health' everyone nods, and then say 'ergo, remove functional support to deal with these situations and give CBT for false beliefs because the cause is the person trapping themselves in helplessness'. I've italicised the themselves (reason: helplessness) because that is where the switch and bait on the cause is vs 'person is trapped by the combination of an unyielding illness in a situation that does not accommodate these disabilities' (reason: exertion needed to fix situation, exertion makes illness worse)
- which, as an aside, has now given me an idea for critique could be someone scribbling additions onto their [BPS] diagram and adding in the exertion bit, that is now known/confirmed, with arrows, to say ... ergo the solution is one-stop-shop functional support and medical adjustments written etc.
Why did it need BACME to be mentioned in the middle of this, with their model etc?
"BACME believes that patients should have access to the best available clinically effective treatments, therapy and support with rehabilitation to relieve, reduce and manage symptoms where possible. This will allow patients to make informed choices as to how to manage the impact of ME/CFS on their quality of life and optimise the potential for recovery.
The World Health Organisation defines Rehabilitation as a “process aimed at enabling people to reach and maintain their optimal physical, sensory, intellectual, psychological and social functional levels. Rehabilitation provides people with the tools they need to attain independence and selfdetermination. Rehabilitation is concerned not only with physical recovery, but also with psychological and social recovery and reintegration (or integration) of the person into the community.”
BACME supports the delivery of flexible, person specific programmes that take into account the underlying biological processes. BACME supports grading activity strategies when delivered by an ME/CFS specialist clinician to make increases and improvements in physical, cognitive and emotional function from an identified stable baseline.
BACME does not support inflexible Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) built on a primary deconditioning model. A deconditioning based approach would involve an inflexible, structured approach where regular increases in activity are encouraged regardless of how the patient is responding.
BACME supports the use of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) strategies and other psychological interventions with the aim of developing management strategies delivered by a specialist ME/CFS clinician who has a good understanding of ME/CFS. BACME does not support the use of inflexible CBT programmes delivered by practitioners who do not have a good understanding of the biological aspects of ME/CFS."
So, as no one has a 'good' understanding of the biological aspects of ME/CFS, that means that according to BACME that there is no one qualified to deliver CBT to pwME so there should be absolutely no CBT?
[Humourless laugh emoji seems to be absent]
What does ‘clinicians’ as a term technically include or exclude ?BACME name change
BACME has elected to change the name of their organisation from "British Association for CFS/ME" to
"British Association of Clinicians in ME/CFS" #MyalgicEncephalomyelitis #ChronicFatigueSyndrome #MEcfs #CFS #MyalgicE #PwME #MyE #MEeps #CFSME
It's a long-standing debate in Catholic doctrine whether the Pope is infallible.BACME supports grading activity strategies when delivered by an ME/CFS specialist clinician to make increases and improvements in physical, cognitive and emotional function from an identified stable baseline.
And the evidence for the efficacy of this approach is...?
I mean, you guys have had 3 decades of almost complete dominance in the field to find it, and yet have only delivered low or very low quality evidence, and shown no capacity to admit error or fundamentally change your ways.
At what point do you take a long hard look at yourselves in the mirror and ask: Are we wrong?
The key paragraph from Clark:I think to them, despite the lip service 'research is going on into different causes/theories' line, they might mean 'their dysfunction theory' : https://www.bacme.info/sites/bacme.info/files/BACME An Introduction to Dysregulation in MECFS.pdf
Although you can scroll down the BACME dysfunction paper and look at the other references they've used to get an idea of who and the topics/titles.
It's opening quote being: "the key pathology which underpins CFS is potentially best understood in computational terms as resulting from altered messages passing amongst homeostatic networks"
.. is from a paper written by Clark et al 2019: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0213724
A comment I made a while ago on this was that it seemed from looking up prior papers in 2018 that Clark was a psychology grad who was then a medical undergrad
https://www.s4me.info/threads/unite...clinicians-in-me-cfs.7900/page-11#post-416025
Julia Newton is one of the 'et al' on the 2019 paper and, along with Stuart Watson has 'supervision' listed under their role on the Clark et al (2019) paper, and the limitations note it is a small study. And a few other papers from them are references in the BACME dysfunction paper too.
Whenever I read this statement, I get a picture in my head of "an ME/CFS specialist clinician" waving a magic wand (only they have) over the patients before beginning treatments that ensure they will accomplish their magical thinking and produce the desired results they say they will and will not harm the patient in any way. I'd like to know where they think they got their magical powers from. So stupid.BACME supports grading activity strategies when delivered by an ME/CFS specialist clinician to make increases and improvements in physical, cognitive and emotional function from an identified stable baseline.
Whenever I read this statement, I get a picture in my head of "an ME/CFS specialist clinician" waving a magic wand (only they have) over the patients before beginning treatments that ensure they will accomplish their magical thinking and produce the desired results they say they will and will not harm the patient in any way. I'd like to know where they think they got their magical powers from. So stupid.
Who are they going to claim did the previous treatments that caused harm or certain didn't help to 80% of people? Because the 2007 guidelines were clear then with the same line about specialist clinician, and I don't see any learning going on from the same people who feel the right to retain that same self-assigned title.
I'm sorry you've experienced this LTSE, how many years has it lasted for?The harm is a permenant worsening of symptoms, after the crash from exercise I never recovered to that baseline again.
I'm sorry you've experienced this LTSE, how many years has it lasted for?
I particularly liked this from Adler's Linked in page
...I have also honed my approach - believing that everyone has the answer inside, sometimes it takes good questioning to uncover the answers and developing a good questioning technique has proved invaluable.