My understanding from UK members, that ME/CFS is categorized as a pscyho-somatic disorder and therefore are denied medical treatments (medical labs, MRI and medicine to treat their biological symptoms) and disability benefits unless proven there is a biological eitology to their illness. Children are taken away from their families for enhancing false illness beliefs, and many patients are locked away in psych wards for refusing CBT/GET believing there is a medical cause for their illness. I have hundreds of cases to prove my point. Is this not so?
In the United States, this is the situation. ME/CFS is diagnosed as psycho-somatic disorders with the CDC treatment options for physicians as CBT/GET and psychotropic medicine. LTD is routinely denied. So, I find your statement very puzzling and disconcerting by the fact that it denies the reality on the ground within the U.S and UK. What was Lady Mar' speech about then if it wasn't the fact that the medical profession in the UK has failed to recognize ME as a medical disease but a psycho-somatic disorder - 'false illness belief or a variant of sickness behavior - as Wessely and White so states? Why are we here then protesting?
There are effective medication to treat the symptoms of ME used in the U.S so we are not as draconian as the UK (Neurotin, Bacflofen, Valtrex, Tizanidine, Oxycodone, Immunovir, LDN, Famvir, Methocarbamol, Alprazolam, Acyclovir, Adderall, Ambiem) just to name a few. Do patients have access to these forms of medication for treatment for ME in the UK?
How much medical research is funded by the Welcome Trust into the biological causes for ME/CFS as to the funding for the psych/social model in the UK?
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As a physician who has been involved with this condition for over 30 years, and as medical adviser to a national charity, I don't believe that this is an accurate reflection of the situation here in the UK.
Don't get me wrong. There are plenty of things amiss with the way ME/CFS is assessed, diagnosed, managed, and researched here in the UK.
As has already been pointed out, and was also discussed at the RSM, there is a wide spectrum of medical opinion about both cause and management of ME/CFS - as occurs in most other parts of the world where this illness is recognised.
So there are doctors like myself who assess, diagnose and treat according to the medical model and others who do so on the basis of a psychosocial model. The majority probably sit somewhere in the middle.
Most patients are properly investigated in primary or secondary care when it comes to the list of investigations that are recommended as routine by the MEA, CMO Report, NICE etc. But there is a variation when it comes to the sort of investigations that are appropriate in certain circumstances. And in some cases patients who ought to be further investigated are not receiving the depth of assessment they should. They are consequently being misdiagnosed as having ME/CFS
You list a number of drugs aimed at both symptomatic relief and the underlying disease process. There is no restriction on prescribing drugs that can effectively help with pain, sleep disturbance etc - including options such as gabapentin. And if doctors are aware of the drugs which can help with symptomatic relief (one of my slides at the RSM) they are often wiling to help. The problem here is lack of medical education.
But you won't find UK doctors - private or NHS - prescribing speculative or unproven forms of treatment aimed at the underlying disease process, especially where they are 'not recommended' by NICE. As you may be aware ,The MEA has strongly opposed the decision to place the NICE 'one size fits all' guideline on a static list and we are campaigning for a revision of this guideline.
I spend a huge amount of time dealing with DWP benefits and it is not true to say that people with ME/CFS are being denied DWP benefits unless they can prove they have a biological illness. People with mental health conditions are fully entitled to claim DWP benefits and if you look at the DWP quarterly stats there has been a steady and significant rise in the numbers going into the ESA support group - partly as a result of the work we have been doing with the DWP. The situation re benefits remains unsatisfactory for ALL people with fluctuating medical conditions but it is not as bleak as you paint it.
Yes - there are cases of child care proceedings being taken where this is not justified. This is something that the Forward ME Group and our paediatric medical adviser (Dr Nigel Speight) are actively involved with - including meeting Mrs Isabelle Trowler, the Chief Social Worker for Children and Adolescents and the Minister responsible for children, Edward Timpson MP. It is on the radar and not being ignored.
Regarding detention of adults under the Mental Health Act: Apart from a very small number of isolated cases it is not true to say that there are 'many' adults being locked away in psychiatric wards for refusing CBT and GET. The situation here in the UK is that there is a desperate shortage of NHS psychiatric beds for people with severe or acute mental illness. You cannot find a psychiatric bed when you need one - as I know from recent experience of trying to do so - not for someone with ME/CFS I should add.
The Welcome Trust funded our meeting at the RSM, and have occasionally funded ME/CFS research (e.g. one of the XMRV replication studies) but I'm not aware of any ME/CFS research being funded by WT at the moment.
People with ME/CFS in the UK do still have really bad experiences with GPs, consultants, DWP assessments to report, which is unacceptable. And the situation for people with severe ME/CFS is scandalous in relation to lack of in-patient facilities for assessment and domiciliary services (as I said at the RSM meeting).
So yes, there are plenty of problems and bad practice and lots of work to be done.
But there are also quite a lot of doctors and health professionals who really want to help their patients with ME/CFS.