It's taken a while, but I've finally managed to get hold of an article that was cited in relation to self-help groups by Dr Darrell Ho-Yen.
To recap, it was in reference to a post by
@Sly Saint here:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/who-w...groups-leads-to-poor-outcome.5109/#post-92013
@Sly Saint says:
Also found it here:
"Self-help groups and patient associations perform a
valuable role in some conditions. This may be true for
ME,
22 but membership of an ME group predicts a poor
outcome,
16 and those referred to hospital specialists are
more likely to be members than those managed by
primary care.
23 It is conceivable (but further studies
would be needed to test) that this association is causal
if, like a religious sect, the group process perpetuates a
non-adaptive set of beliefs and behaviours around ME."
[From: Graham Sutton. ‘Too tired to go to the support group': a health needs assessment of myalgic encephalomyelitis. J Public Health Med 1996; 18:343-49]
https://academic.oup.com/jpubhealth/article-pdf/18/3/343/4380046/18-3-343.pdf
I checked out the references mentioned:
16 Wilson A, Hickie I, Lloyd A, et al. Longitudinal study of outcome of chronic fatigue syndrome. Br Med J 1994; 308: 756-759.
22 Ho-Yen DO, Grant A. Self-help groups give valuable support. Br Med J 1994; 308: 1298-1299.
23 Euba R, Chalder T, Deale A, et al. A comparison of the characteristics of chronic fatigue syndrome in primary and tertiary care. Br J Psychiat 1996; 168: 121-126.
Ref 16 is a misquote - I think Sutton meant to quote Sharpe's 1992 study, that we've mentioned before, because that's the only one that actually looked at the association.
I was intrigued by the Ho-Yen Grant reference (here:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2540186/?page=1), because it referred to a study he did with the Moray Firth ME Support Group. I thought that following the reference cited to GP magazine would reveal much more details about the paper he mentioned.
Anyway, this week, I managed to get hold of it, thanks to the kind person at the Royal Free 1955 twitter account who was visiting the British Library.
However, on receiving it, it was disappointing to find that actually, the main results of the questionnaire survey he did was in the BMJ letter, and although there was a little more info in the GP Magazine article, it didn't really provide a full write up of the study itself. [Although, over the next few days, I'm going to put together a compilation of Ho-Yen's BMJ letter and the GP Mag article to give a broader picture.]
It's also disappointing that the only other place that Ho-Yen's article is mentioned is in disparaging terms by Williams and Hooper as an example of poor press about ME. This is simply because of the headline that the subs at GP magazine gave it: "GPs despise the ME generation", and not because of the content, which is a great shame.
But there was one thing. Ho-Yen cites another BMJ article on self-help groups by Stephen Lock, who was editor of BMJ at the time (Lock S. Self help groups: the fourth estate in medicine? BMJ 1986; 293: 1596-1600
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1351868/). So I looked it up this morning, and I think those of you who have been following this (
@chrisb @Arvo @Sly Saint ) might be interested in the perspective it gives, particularly the results of Lock's own survey.