I understand and agree with the intent of this recommendation but struggle with the specific wording...
I also can't reveal some conversations we have had with some of the ICC scientists. Marly Silverman was at the IACFS/ME Conference and gave a presentation on the Coalition's efforts.
Regardless of what “some of the ICC scientists” may have said in private, the ICC, CDC, CFSAC, NCHS and many patients have not yet agreed with the Coalition's plan to do away with CFS and replace it with ME. And that plan is dividing us.
Dr. Unger told us at the November CFSAC meeting that the CDC has heard about our disagreement:
I have gotten lots of communication from people saying that CFS is different from ME. I have got people that insist that it is the same thing. I think that there is disagreement. There is confusion in the field about whether it should be the same thing, whether it should be two things, whether it should be a hyphen name. Until there is clarity of what we are talking about, we cannot give good guidance. There has to be more consensuses among experts. Hopefully getting our contract started will be the beginning of the dialogue. There are legitimate points to be made on both sides. I do not have the answer yet.
Days later, David Tuller quoted Dr. Unger:
Opinions of advocates, clinicians and researchers remain divided about whether CFS and ME are the same or different entities. However, we are following the discussions with interest and would consider any consensus that is reached by patient groups and the scientific community going forward.
With no agreement among patients, between patients and the scientific community, and among the experts, Dr. Lee quickly dismissed any idea of calling CFS “ME” at last month's CFSAC meeting. CFSAC supported the Coalition's Option 1 in November “because CFS includes both viral and non‐viral triggers.” At that time, CFSAC noted that the science is not yet conclusive concerning the relationship between CFS, ME and PVFS:
Current scientific evidence would indicate there are more similarities between the three entities than there are differences. Whether they are synonyms for the same underlying concept, disease entities and sub‐entities, or merely the best coding guess is unclear. In reality, any or all of the above may be correct. While the relationship between CFS, B(ME) and PVFS is not stated, that they are grouped together in ICD 10 (WHO) would indicate some rationale for a connection. Our understanding is that this association will be maintained in the ICD 11, which may also include further description of the relationship.
The Joint Request for Action complains that NCHS has not yet made a crucial determination in the Coalition's favour:
The Coalition 4 ME/CFS submitted a proposal to NCHS in July 2011 to request CFS be reclassified. To date, NCHS has not made the change, communicated their decision or responded to queries on the status. It is crucial that NCHS ensures that the ICD-10-CM classification of CFS is aligned with WHO's neurological classification before ICD-10-CM rolls out.
Yet the Coalition may have undermined its own proposal.
The seeds of confusion were sown shortly after the ME-ICC announcement on July 20, 2011, within days of the Coalition's having submitted its NCHS proposal. The Coalition quickly updated its proposal to include the ICC. Based on its misreading of the ICC, the Coalition stated in its September NCHS presentation, “
When properly defined, CFS is the same as ME.” Kim McCleary also mistook the ICC initially to mean that “ME” should be used as a replacement for CFS. Cort posted (and quickly removed) a controversial article repeating these misinterpretations. Despite his intentions, that article was never revised and reposted after the IACFS/ME Conference.
Marly Silverman's conference presentation on the Coalition's efforts was planned for a lunch hour. Scheduled at 8:30 on Saturday morning, Dr. Carruthers'
ICC presentation gave her little or no time for any revision based on new insights. Though Fred Friedberg had allowed time for Q and A about the new criteria and expected a lively session, none was reported.
Had the ICC presentation been digested by patient advocates last September, it might have given them pause. The ICC does not support the Coalition's statement that CFS is the same as ME. US subject-matter experts, if contacted by NCHS, may not contradict the ICC to agree with the Coalition. Given the paucity of ME subject-matter experts in the US, NCHS may well consider statements made by international experts, statements that contradict the Coalition. The Coalition may then have inadvertently undermined its own proposal. The alternate NCHS proposal is favoured, of course, by the CDC.
Should the Coalition defer, until the science has spoken, its plan to “phase away the awful 'CFS' label and diagnostic criteria, replacing it with ME” and agree instead that ME is a distinct and separate subset of CFS, that decision would both clarify its reclassification request and allow patients to speak with one voice again. If there's one disease or syndrome with subsets, then pending any retraction of CFS definitions, that disease or syndrome is currently CFS and the separate subset is ME.
The Joint Request for Actions asks for "a significant, sustained and coordinated commitment from DHHS to address...key priorities: (1) Resolve the definition, name and classification confusion.” By taking a position consistent with the ICC, the Coalition would help to resolve confusion born of its own creation.
(Edit: Note again that the lead authors consider the CCC to be an ME definition.)