A.B.
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The political arguments may much easier to win now that SEID is acknowledged to cause direct and indirect losses of $17-billion to $24-billion annually due to lack of adequate treatment.
Here's the BMJ article. They did a bit of their own take on it, emphasizing depression and anxiety (surprise....) [...]
"The committee found that ME/CFS is a debilitating condition characterized by profound fatigue, pain, sleep disturbances, and post-exertional malaise, often accompanied by secondary depression or anxiety. "
page 32 of the download:Yes, it's disappointing that they didn't include a funding recommendation. Since it isn't "part of our mandate" a strong statement like "We recommend X million dollars over the next Y years" would stand out even more. Sadly, bureaucrats seldom bite the hand that feeds, unless they're trying to make the Boss look bad so they can be the Boss instead...
No specific recommendations about funding but a damning comment nevertheless.Although there was sufficient evidence with which to carry out the first steps of its task, the committee was struck by the relative paucity of research on ME/CFS conducted to date. Remarkably little research funding has been made available to study the etiology, pathophysiology, and effective treatment of this disease, especially given the number of people afflicted. Thus, the committee was unable to define subgroups of patients or even to clearly define the natural history of the disease. More research is essential.
Symptoms can persist for years, and most patients never regain their premorbid level of health or functioning (Nisenbaum et al., 2000; Reyes et al., 2003; Reynolds et al., 2004).
Conclusion: The committee agrees that the term “chronic fatigue syndrome” often results in stigmatization and trivialization and should no longer be used as the name of this illness.
To be fair to the BMJ (and I think we should be fair to them, when they do a reasonable job), they make it clear that depression and anxiety are secondary (i.e. caused by the misery of having the illness, not part of the illness itself).
Reliability
A lack of replication and validation in many studies limits the ability to assess the study findings critically. Few attempts have been made to follow up on or replicate intriguing findings in the literature to date.
In their review of 39 measures of fatigue, Whitehead and colleagues (2009) found that although some measures were better than others, none were ideal. Most measures have insufficient sensitivity and specificity to encompass all of the various and important aspects of fatigue in ME/CFS (Jason et al., 2011a). In addition, health care providers should note that a single assessment of fatigue severity may not provide a full understanding of the patterns of fatigue presenting over a day in ME/CFS patients (Jason and Brown, 2013).
Yes, but we HAVE been shouting. There have been petitions, letter writing campaigns, protests, etc. That's where I felt discouraged by her suggestion. I agree that we have a new tool to refer to in this IOM report - and that it may help. I'm just not hugely hopeful that our pleas will be heard more now than ever. I hope I'm wrong about that.![]()
Yes, and see how long it takes for "systemic exertion intolerance disease" to be abbreviated in that way and demorbidified to "systemic exertion intolerance", just as CFS so often becomes plain Chronic Fatigue.systemic exertion intolerance - no thanks - sounds like something Gwyneth might have. An intolerance is not a real issue. People with food, drug intolerances are laughed at and told theey have psych disorders.
We need specialists, but we also need GPs able to recognise the basic picture, and manage it.Another failure of this report is the assignment of a specialty to be responsible in the care of this complex disease. They attempted to "simplify" this disease so that GPs can diagnose it but other serious disease like MS, RA, Parkinsons..etc., have specialists who care for them.
Wow. Read this terrific comment:http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/839532#vp_2
Some of the comments show how this report is no magic wand...
Dr. v m| Family Medicine6 minutes ago
I am a 45 yr old family physician with income of $200k + before I was struck with a flu, then this illness 3 yrs ago. I have been homebound since, unable to ride in a car to even less than 5 miles due to intense draining. Since then, unable to work due to this weakness, or play outside with my 8 yr old. Sold our 5 bedroom 3 bath home and moved into an apartment and back to an intern's salary (disability).
Will any of the naysayer physician colleagues here want to trade places with me?
First, do no harm. With your ignorance, and more appallingly, your unwillingness to even look at this illness, you are causing your patients extreme harm. It would help much better, if you rather say truthfully, that you are not aware of this illness or had much experience with it, so you are unable to help. Patients understand. This is not a time for your ego, peoples' LIVES are at stake here.
Nobody can know more about this illness than a physician with this illness. So, do not even pretend to know and dump it into a waste basket. Unfortunately, there are a lot of physicians like me. We are all willing to testify. ( I don't know if IOM included such physician-patients in their study. If they didn't, they should ).
My term for this illness would be PRAG, Prolonged recovery asthena gravis. Asthenia indicates extreme lack of strength, gravis, the serious nature of this illness, Prolonged recovery is the sine qua non of this illness, the recovery can be days, weeks, or years. There are many patients who have been home or bed bound for decades.
Naysayers, please refer to phoenixrising.me which has over 10,000 patients sharing their disabling illness, which is CFS/ME.
Summary [of Fatigue section]
Fatigue, chronic fatigue, and particularly the impact of fatigue on function should be assessed in making a diagnosis of ME/CFS. Health care pro- viders may use a range of questions and instruments to evaluate fatigue and its impact on function in these patients (see Chapter 7, Table 7-1). However, ME/CFS should not be considered merely a point on the fatigue spectrum or as being simply about fatigue. Experienced clinicians and researchers, as well as patients and their supporters, have emphasized for years that this complex illness presentation entails much more than the chronic presence of fatigue. Other factors, such as orthostatic intolerance, widespread pain, unrefreshing sleep, cognitive dysfunction, and immune dysregulation, along with secondary anxiety and depression, contribute to the burden imposed by fatigue in this illness. The challenge in understanding this acquired chronic debility, unfortunately named “chronic fatigue syndrome” for more than two decades, will be to unravel those complexities.