Belated coming to this thread
Hi, all; have just read through this thread (when I first looked at it as it began I did not know what CAA stood for...), and agree with most of the negative commentary--it is appalling that this is part of what our docs read when they go to the web for info on CFS. And thanks to all for some great commentary on exericise and PEM-PEE stuff. A couple of things strike me: one is the date--2005-6; it reads like something from prehistory--there is one side ref to Cheney, but nothing about hearts and cardiac function, nothing about mitochondrial dysfunction, nothing about viruses--let alone retroviruses. The world has changed! This document must be replaced!
I think many of the statements from named docs are honest, but we all know that more work has been done on things like exercise since; but does anyone know anything about Marcia Harmon, who put the thing together? Her biases are evident not only in the side piece intruding Peter White into the discussion, but also in her reference to Stephen Straus and his 2004 JAMA article. Straus is the guy who wrote a piece that resulted in a press release that said "LIFETIME HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS IN PEOPLE WITH CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME" and resulted in headlines like this in the Washington Post: "Chronic Fatigue linked to psychiatric troubles." (Osler's Web, p. 315).
Does anyone know whether she is still Director of Communications at CAA?
It is also worth checking out the CFS piece on UpToDate, a commercial outfit that produces info designed to bring docs up to date--I was given a copy by my doc--it claims to have been updated in Jan 2009, but is pretty appalling --I have mislaid my copy at the moment, but includes statements that the discussion whether CFS is psychogenic or biogenic is still unresolved, that it does not kill, and that there is no point in doing immune testing because the results would only include false positives (it being assumed nothing serious is wrong, so they would have to be false). I will post more if and when I find it again.
I am writing a letter to the Vancouver Island Health Authority because they control health services where I live, and my doc downloaded the document from their website, but writing not only to CAA but also to health authorities who maintain websites designed to help keep GPs up to speed might be something to think about some more--probably some of you are already doing that and are way ahead of me--I have only just started thinking about advocacy issues--a bit late, I admit.
Best, Chris