Time for the Big Talk. How's the CAA doing?

Dolphin

Senior Member
Messages
17,568
Do you make exceptions, tomk, for cognitive difficulties? I have read every single one of the 1,384 posts (is this something I should be proud to confess or be embarrassed about?) and I remember . . . a . . . a . . . what was the question?
:Retro smile:

Peter White/Barts CF/CFS Service might have the answer for that symptom - this was a submission on the draft NICE guidelines:
http://forums.aboutmecfs.org/showthread.php?t=1757 (one of links in my sig)
(ii) On making information available on audio tape:

SH St Bartholomew's Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services
91 FULL 260 13

Why should anyone with concentration difficulties find it easier to
use audiovisual technology, which by your implication does not involve
reading, more than reading itself (from either a book or computer
screen)? Would it not be more effective to negotiate a simple graded
programme of reading to help such a patient improve their reading
ability, along with helping to improve their cognitive capacity
through improving sleep and mood? What might be effective advice is to
encourage the use of voice-activated software in someone who finds
typing using a keyboard physical tiring, and needs to meet a deadline
in their job or studies.

GDG (who put the final guidelines together):
Noted and removed – we consider that the text on including cognitive activities addresses these points.
Peter White was very close to Bill Reeves in the CDC - fingers crossed he loses his influence.
 

justinreilly

Senior Member
Messages
2,498
Location
NYC (& RI)
Tom,

Thanks for the clarification. Given my state of relatively better health at that time, I did think of what I was doing was something more than just the activities of daily living (laundry, cooking, going to the store).

This whole topic is so sensitive, understandably so because if done incorrectly it can constitute abuse and be quite dangerous to our immediate and long term health. On top of that, skeptics and detractors have wrapped themselves in the CBT and GET cloak, implying malingering and psychological issues. It isn't hard for me to see how a well meaning doc who really does understand CFS might use a term in an imprecise manner that infuriates the CFS patient who has had to deal with the ignorant doc that takes the recommendation as license to ignore common decency and respect for the patient.

From my perspective, much of what the CAA is promoting is imprecise (and dangerous) language but I really don't see this as a mindset of indifference and malice towards the most ill (although I do agree that the longer the CAA takes to address the problematic and dangerous language, it can see that way).

What is most concerning to me (and I'm not referring to anything that Tom has said) is all of the angst and energy being spent in this thread when I really don't think we differ in what we want the CAA to do (pacing, patient centered, permission/encouragement to appreciate limits and to very often do less, advocate for assistance in developing coping mechanisms and NO CBT or NO GET).

The differences seem to be in the amount of time we are willing to allow the CAA to change (clean up the language and remove unsupported recommendations) and what we want to happen to the CAA if they don't make the changes fast enough
...

Shane
[emphasis added]

You really clarified this for me. Great point.
 

justinreilly

Senior Member
Messages
2,498
Location
NYC (& RI)
Orla,

Thanks for your reply. I have said this in earlier posts - maybe we need more than one advocacy group. Take all this energy, the real differences in opinion (and the very valid view that we don't have all day) and start a separate advocacy organization or maybe rather than starting from scratch, get an existing group to take concrete steps and lead the way.

HIV has its numerous groups. I guess what I'm heading towards is to "put pressure" on the CAA by leading, not just attacking. Maybe trying to take the lead is impractical, maybe not. Maybe showing the way is the only way to affect real change. Maybe the list of doctors that truly get CFS is too small to separate into numerous advocacy orgs. I seriously doubt that all CFS docs are entirely comfortable with the CAA recommendations.

I just don't think that the CAA is going to be swayed by what is likely to be perceived as an all out attack (or perhaps a hostile take over). Personally, I don't have the energy for the fight and I don't see it is as the best use of the limited energy I do have. I see all of the anger here as very valid and understandable but some seems a bit misdirected and none of would scream "approachable" if I were a CAA board member.

Maybe it is too late for cooperation. War is what happens when diplomacy fails. Which side (there are more than two sides here) gets to decide when diplomacy has been given a fair shake. Lots of casualties.

At the very least, I have very real concerns that ''Kill the CAA" will end up costing all of us quite a valuable asset on the research end of things (and unnecessarily so).

Very tasty food for thought. PANDORA seems to do good advocacy work on a limited scale. Correct me if I'm wrong. Supporting them with cash or volunteer work could be productive.

A bunch of us forming a new org could be productive. As you noted on a much earlier post, it would take years to really ramp this up to a national-level sized org, but this is not a reason not to begin.

At some point soon I will devote less time to this thread as I think I have said what I want to say and gotten the general jist of what others think. Maybe then I can begin to contribute, at least at a snail's pace, to a kernal of this type of org along with others on this thread.

I do want to reiterate I was the only one who used the phrase "if CAA dies..." and I do not want to kill CAA nor do I think there is a significant danger that will happen.
 

justinreilly

Senior Member
Messages
2,498
Location
NYC (& RI)
:Retro smile:

Peter White/Barts CF/CFS Service might have the answer for that symptom - this was a submission on the draft NICE guidelines:
http://forums.aboutmecfs.org/showthread.php?t=1757 (one of links in my sig)
(ii) On making information available on audio tape:

SH St Bartholomew's Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services
91 FULL 260 13

Why should anyone with concentration difficulties find it easier to
use audiovisual technology, which by your implication does not involve
reading, more than reading itself (from either a book or computer
screen)? Would it not be more effective to negotiate a simple graded
programme of reading to help such a patient improve their reading
ability, along with helping to improve their cognitive capacity
through improving sleep and mood? What might be effective advice is to
encourage the use of voice-activated software in someone who finds
typing using a keyboard physical tiring, and needs to meet a deadline
in their job or studies.

GDG (who put the final guidelines together):
Noted and removed – we consider that the text on including cognitive activities addresses these points.

Peter White was very close to Bill Reeves in the CDC - fingers crossed he loses his influence.

Yay! Peter White is going to teach us to read!
 

justinreilly

Senior Member
Messages
2,498
Location
NYC (& RI)
Re CME:
...This is basically the program that you and I and others have been waiting for....and you've just smeared it, Dr. Bateman, myself, Dr. Lapp and all the others, all over the map. Well done, Dr. No...

Ohhh, this is the program I've been waiting for. Okay, sorry about the prior disapproving comments.
 

Dr. Yes

Shame on You
Messages
868
Okay, I had a doctor's appointment, a horrible day, and come back to this forum after what I thought would be a post even Cort would like and DAMN was I wrong.. and then I type a very strong response to his mini-diatribe and by the time I get done and field a few phone calls and blah blah blah, Roy S. has cleverly told us to lighten up (I thought that's what I was doing!) Now I feel bad about posting the stuff below, but I think it sets a worse precedent to allow this sort of thing to continue without comment (especially if it involves me, of course!).

Cort, this is the second time you have not only missed what MANY others found humorous about a genuine attempt to communicate by humor, but actually gotten angry at me personally and made remarkably unfair statements about my intentions. I know in both cases the issue is one you seem to have tremendous personal investment in - the CAA - but that does not excuse it. I wish instead of that you would PM me and ask me what I meant, as you found out last time that you overreacted as well. Or in any case. Talk to me personally before you make a public attack. I was clearly not trying to attack you but to explain something that you were going on and on about with Tom (who was having to make the same point repeatedly to you in as many ways as he could) and when I saw you say "I give up", then "I'm back" and "I just can't quit" or whatever, I laughed (even though I felt sick as a dog) and thought of a way I could answer your question in a way that would escape the dense rhetoric and come across as more amiable (yet still debating). I guess I failed miserably in your eyes. I have - once again - gotten a lot of supportive PM's and calls from people I hardly know (before even having read your reply), so I know I'm not the only one who has this opinion. But since it bothered you personally, and you made your comments public instead of talking to me directly, I will answer your points and try to put you at ease on some issues (and I hope you will do the same for me on others, as you gracefully did last time).

Where does the CME say that exercise is not potentially harmful?
I think you missed the point. While saying that, for example, 'vigorous' exercise is potentially harmful, and even subtler points, the CME at the same time recommends exercise as a functionally restorative therapy, suggests that patients may well not be doing enough activity, recommends graded activity or exercise, and recommends gradually increasing activity even for severely ill patients without the warning that for some gradual increase of any kind, or even unnecessary activity beyond what is physiologically monitored as appropriate, is contraindicated for many of these patients. Don't forget - for low functioning patients 'activity' means
'exercise'.

I'm trying to refer to the CME as much as possible. If you suggest that anything I said or the CME says suggests that exercise is not potentially very harmful then, honestly, you're doing me a HUGE injustice. You really are.
First of all, WOW. Chill, Cort! About a dozen people on this thread and a few dozen on others have suggested the same things and you didn't go "China Syndrome" on them! So merely suggesting something you feel is incorrect about the CME (it's an inanimate cyberspace object, not a person with feelings) is considered "a HUGE injustice" to YOU, personally?? (Re-read your sentence there. That's actually what you wrote!) And the alternative you offer is that merely suggesting something you feel is incorrect about your position is also a "HUGE" injustice to you. By that definition, Cort, you have done me and many other posters on this forum HUGE injustices at various times by suggesting that we hold positions that we absolutely, vehemently do NOT. On this thread alone, in the last few days, you have alienated several posters who have complained to me about your 'attacks', as some called them, in which you totally missed the point of their posts and accused them of holding a very different position - an opposite one - from those they had. I saw a few examples, but had decided in the interests of peace and quiet not to PM you about them, post about them or try reporting them. But here you have gone WAY too far, and someone has to call you on it, and no one else wants to.. so I guess the dude with the oxygen mask and an attitude has to!

Now, the above argument was just a matter of principle, by which you were also wrong, but I also want to be understood clearly myself... because you actually misunderstood the comments that you took offense to (again).

Please stop taking comments out of context; it would again be helpful if you at least sent me a PM to ask my meaning if it troubles you before you post angrily (and you post angrily a LOT Cort, which is stressing out a lot of people who have spoken to me... a lot of them are afraid to post on the CAA threads and at least four have told me at various times that they won't post anymore because of how aggressively you respond... I think we should be able to report that to moderators, though I don't think anyone believes that will work). I suppose posting 22 times in less than a day on a single thread (there should be a forum rule against that, by the way) would make it easy to forget some of the things you say. Or you say them wrong. I'm sure I say things wrong too; perhaps I did in this case, but if so the right thing to do would be to send me a polite PM asking my meaning. Anyway, when you read the first part of what I said:

Tom wasn't merely saying that he doesn't "like" the idea of any kind of exercise program being included, I believe he was saying NO exercise program should be included because ANY exercise program is potentially HARMFUL to many patients!
you were supposed to carry this logic through the whole post , to my own experiences with doctors. Had you done that, I think you would have seen that I was trying to answer for Tom (who I agree with) that the CAA should not recommend any exercise or graded activity programs to physicians, NOT just because they are potentially harmful (which is where you stopped following what I was saying), but because any mentions of exercise or graded activity automatically prompt a majority of healthcare professionals to misleading ideas (usually stemming from preconceptions) about the nature of ME/CFS and distort their already easily distorted views of us and how to treat us. Enough people have already made this point to you, so I won't re-hash it. If you ask the same questions again and again, it is silly to criticize those who exasperatedly try to explain it, yet again, for 'beating a dead horse' or 'going over the same arguments again and again'.

I have noted many times my inability to engage in real exercise and I have directly quoted sections right from the document many times that warn about exercise. Did you not read those?
If you are referring to the CME, then yes, I have read every section you have posted before you posted them, multiple times. As have many others here, who are some of our most knowledgeable advocates in the matter of exercise and ME/CFS, whose positions are identical to mine. There is too much in the CME that will lead too many health professionals directly to wrong conclusions about patients and exercise/activity. The worst is the "avoidance activity"/ kinesiophobia psychobabble. That is not only scientifically invalid and horribly unfair, but it is the last thing in the world you want to tell doctors if you expect them to heed "warnings" of the kind you refer to. Plus, as we keep having to tell you, the exercise stuff is unnecessary and in fact only encourages the common stupidities that many PWC have to endure.

The fact that this is a doctor to doctor communication, hombre
(by the way, I really meant 'hombre' in a casual, friendly way. I say it all the time. I was trying to be casual and friendly. I am a casual and friendly guy. I thought you were, too, but I suppose a lot gets lost in internet communication. I thought by now you knew my personality well enough, though! People around here say you have no sense of humor, but I don't believe it. You're just very, very sensitive, and I will remember that.)

..and that doctors who read it will come away with the understanding that 'exercise' as they know it is VERY HARMFUL to CFS patients. What I'm saying is that doctors who read the CME

  • will finally understand that exercise can have terrible results for CFS patients
  • will finally understand that CFS patients should not engage in aerobic exercise
  • will finally not ask CFS patients to engage in anything that exacerbates their symptoms or makes their health worse; ie will not ask you to do what other doctors have done
  • will finally understand that any 'exercise' CFS patients engage in should be very, very light, ie a few minutes of walking followed by more minutes of rest and that very seriously ill patients should not engage in any kind of 'exercise'

This is basically the cure for the exercise groupies in the medical profession. Basically that any Doctor who reads this will NOT treat you as you've been treated before. They will not ask you to engage in exercise that harms you. In fact they will treat you and exercise with kid gloves.
It sounds like you are willing that to be true! That is the most optimistic thing I have read in some time. :D Unfortunately, it is your opinion alone, based on what must be a limited or fortunate experience of standard (non-specialist) health professionals and clinicians, of whom I have (sadly) all too much real experience. I wish you were right, but that is wishful thinking.

And no, since they are reading a program which details the problems associated with exercise, no they don't have to worry about 'nuances' - all they have to do is read a short easily digested program. That's why it's there - to easily inform doctors who are interested in CFS about it.
By the way, in your original post that I responded to you were not talking about the CME alone... but if that's all we are talking about, see above.

This is basically the program that you and I and others have been waiting for....and you've just smeared it, Dr. Bateman, myself, Dr. Lapp and all the others, all over the map.
Perhaps "sensitive" was not the right word, because this comment is just bizarre. This is the program that I and - how many others, from different continents? - have spent a lot of effort protesting about and then trying to organize some effort to correct, motivated by just how WRONG it was. You are in a minority of about one on this issue here, Cort, and you are well aware of that (those 30 something posts weren't directed at me) yet you singled me out for this comment. It would be more appopriate to say: "to all the forum members who have posted their criticisms of the CME and their personal, very painful negative experiences with some of the ideas propagated in it, I have this to say....". Instead, you favored a personal attack. I think that was doing me, and all of us by extension, a huge injustice - and I am not mocking you by repeating your words; I really mean it.

Well done, Dr. No.
Who says you don't have a sense of humor? :D [*note - that was an attempt at humor*]

Being humorous is fine. Purposefully misreading my comments and then ranting on them, for the pleasure of all, is certainly not fine in my book.
Okay, not cool. That comment implies underhanded motive and intent behind what I wrote. I believe that is a violation of Forum Rules. If it's not, it should be. It is unfair to me and unhealthy for this forum. I believe you should hold yourself to the same standards as other members, if you want us to feel like equal citizens of this community (which seems to be your vision as well). I would therefore appreciate an apology. You were very gracious in your last one. If you understand the need for this, you may reply privately or publicly. I prefer to talk one on one, where I am at my best. But since it has become public, maybe its better to air things out in public. The "CAA and Forum Debate: Double Standards?" thread that I had requested Kurt to start after that 'satire' nonsense was to address this very issue, among other things; I would recommend any conversation on this issue be continued there. Do whatever you think is right. For my part, I already said in the post itself and above in the first paragraph what my intention was. I never imagined that this post would upset you; I actually ran it by one of the most polite people on this forum first (because I wondered if humor would be misunderstood yet again) and even she thought it was fine, and thought I made the points well. And she's smarter than you and me put together!

A sense of humor is a very useful thing, by the way, and utterly necessary when your body, your family, and your life have been torn apart.

(I still think you have one, by the way! But I do believe you are a bit too emotionally involved in all things CAA to always see clearly in such discussions.)

I hope that the hostility that was being directed at particular forum members by you and maybe one or two others is over for good (and that I haven't just re-ignited it!) Those of us on the other "side" (what side??), i.e. who Cort has disagreed with, were not disrespectful to him at all, and their "anger" was directed only at the misrepresentation of our disease by the CAA. Personally, I just wanted to get stuff done, and didn't want this thread sidetracked like it frequently is by the "everybody argue with Cort" thing. I had prepared a post before the last one to address those issues, and to ask for some constructive action. I hope I will still be able to, and I'm sorry if I had to add more tension to this thread, but it's no fun being misunderstood and angrily responded to like that, even in the best of health, and I am so many miles from that.
 

Orla

Senior Member
Messages
708
Location
Ireland
Dr. Richard Bruno, a post-polio survivor and one of the experts on post-polio syndrome, said he finds the biggest problem is getting patients to use aids and generally they are inclined to do too much to their detriment (not exact quote).

It's interesting that somebody with the illness can often tend to have different perspectives.

Yes, and also as a wheelchair user himself Richard Bruno would not have the wheelchair (or physical aid) hang-ups so many medics have. He would understand that it could lead to greater mobility for patients and not less. A lot of doctors seem to have very negative, and sometimes very false, views of wheelchairs. It is almost like they see the wheelchair itself as disabling, instead of viewing the condition the person has as disabling, and the wheelchair as just an enabling device like a car.

I can understand that doctors want the patients to use their legs a little if they can (I am talking about patients in general, not ME/CFS patients), but for many not having a wheelchair is going to mean cutting out many social, and even practical, activities (or making oneself worse if you have to do an activity that involves too much walking). Some people use wheelchairs only for some activities.

I remember seeing a talk by Richard Bruno where I think he said that he even has to argue with patients a bit to use aids as they are so resistant to using them, even if he is saying they could help. (I just thought, a man after my own heart :hug: ). So it is not like patients choose these options lightly.

Personally I think that many ME/CFS patients could benefit from (even occassional) use of certain devices, but there is going to be a problem getting any OT, Physio or doctor to recommend and approve devices so long as they keep hearing that exercise can improve functionality. Doctors etc. are already biased against wheelchairs so won't want to suggest them, and medicare or whoever will also not want to fund them, if you tell them exercise is going to improve function.

And not to be banging on about it but the CME does say this, even though there is no evidence for it. They say this about ME/CFS patients in general:

A strengthening and conditioning program can reduce pain, prevent muscle spasms, increase strength and flexibility, improve balance, reduce falls, and enhance stamina and function in CFS patients http://cme.medscape.com/viewarticle/581527_8
.


Graded exercise may include both anaerobic and aerobic activities and can be effective in improving function and decreasing fatigue.http://cme.medscape.com/viewarticle/581527_8

and the severe:

A subset of people with CFS are so severely ill that they are largely housebound or bedbound. They require special attention, including a modified approach to exercise. Hand stretches and picking up and grasping objects may be all that can be managed at first. Gradually increasing activity to the point that patients can handle essential activities of daily living -- getting up, personal hygiene, and dressing -- is the next step.

Focusing on improving flexibility and minimizing the impact of deconditioning so patients can increase function enough to manage basic activities is the goal with severely ill patients.
http://cme.medscape.com/viewarticle/581527_8


Orla

Declaration of interest ;) : Wheelchair/mobility scooter user :wheelchair:
 

oerganix

Senior Member
Messages
611
Yes, and also as a wheelchair user himself Richard Bruno would not have the wheelchair (or physical aid) hang-ups so many medics have. He would understand that it could lead to greater mobility for patients and not less. A lot of doctors seem to have very negative, and sometimes very false, views of wheelchairs. It is almost like they see the wheelchair itself as disabling, instead of viewing the condition the person has as disabling, and the wheelchair as just an enabling device like a car.

I can understand that doctors want the patients to use their legs a little if they can (I am talking about patients in general, not ME/CFS patients), but for many not having a wheelchair is going to mean cutting out many social, and even practical, activities (or making oneself worse if you have to do an activity that involves too much walking). Some people use wheelchairs only for some activities.

I remember seeing a talk by Richard Bruno where I think he said that he even has to argue with patients a bit to use aids as they are so resistant to using them, even if he is saying they could help. (I just thought, a man after my own heart :hug: ). So it is not like patients choose these options lightly.

Personally I think that many ME/CFS patients could benefit from (even occassional) use of certain devices, but there is going to be a problem getting any OT, Physio or doctor to recommend and approve devices so long as they keep hearing that exercise can improve functionality. Doctors etc. are already biased against wheelchairs so won't want to suggest them, and medicare or whoever will also not want to fund them, if you tell them exercise is going to improve function.

And not to be banging on about it but the CME does say this, even though there is no evidence for it. They say this about ME/CFS patients in general:

.




and the severe:




Orla

Declaration of interest ;) : Wheelchair/mobility scooter user :wheelchair:

Yeah, the whole thing is incredibly arrogant, implying that PWCs are not already doing all this, to the extent they can, and need to pay a doctor to tell them to!
 

Cort

Phoenix Rising Founder
Yet more iron-clad evidence that CAA are incompetent amateurs playing with our health and lives. They need to be supervised like hawks by the real experts like Orla, Gerwyn, Tom K. and others on PR fora. There is absolutely zero excuse for not submitting their current and future publications to these experts for final editing. I consider refusing to do so from now onward as intentionally reckless and harmful behavior against all PwME.

Honestly I don't even know how to respond to some of your posts. . Argue if you wish about the pro's and con's of the CME but stating that the CAA is an 'incompetent amateur' and Dr. Bateman is an 'incompetent amateur' and that Dr. Lapp is an 'incompetent amateur' - since they wrote the CME - I don't whether to laugh or cry.

"Intentionally reckless" - they're not only being 'reckless' but being 'intentionally reckless. Did their recklessness derive from their consulting people who have vast experience and who are well liked in this field? Is that where it came from?

There is, or should, be a standard of discourse on the Forums. Fine - disagree with anything - spell out why in detail - but don't indulge in overheated and inflammatory rhetoric. You go too far Justin. Tone it down or don't post.
 

Orla

Senior Member
Messages
708
Location
Ireland
Cort, some of us are trying to critique a document we see as flawed. I think it is unheplul to keep dragging specific doctors names into it, and then sometimes going on to essentially re-organise these people's comments (or just plain change them) to make it appear as though some people are making (apparently) derogatory comments about doctors, when they are essentially making derogatory comments about an inanimate document that needs to be corrected. I think what you are doing is causing some unnecessary tension and upset in the thread.

Even criticisms about an organisation are not really in the same vein as criticisms of an individual. (And I am not saying I agree with everything everyone says about the CAA).

I understand that you probably don't mean to do this but you are personalising the argument, and then getting upset at what you see as personal attacks on these doctors, which I think people in general (maybe all, don't have the energy to check all the messages again) were not making.

A criticism of something specific a doctor has written or said is not the same thing as a more general criticism of that doctor.

Orla
 
G

Gerwyn

Guest
Communication with "DR JOE" is a complex business

I would suggest the following.

"Excercising can kill a person with severe ME or worse.

This can get you embroiled in medical negligence litigation which could last for several years

There is no scientific evidence that CBT is a treatment for ME/cfs

Counselling can benefit anyone with a chronic debilitating incurable illness.Surveys consistantly show that person centred counselling is the most acceptable and the most effective.

The terms treatment and excercise have their normal medical meaning"

You can add whatever you want after that because" DR JOE/JANE" will no longer be reading
 

Cort

Phoenix Rising Founder
Okay, I had a doctor's appointment, a horrible day, and come back to this forum after what I thought would be a post even Cort would like and DAMN was I wrong.. and then I type a very strong response to his mini-diatribe and by the time I get done and field a few phone calls and blah blah blah, Roy S. has cleverly told us to lighten up (I thought that's what I was doing!) Now I feel bad about posting the stuff below, but I think it sets a worse precedent to allow this sort of thing to continue without comment (especially if it involves me, of course!).

Cort, this is the second time you have not only missed what MANY others found humorous about a genuine attempt to communicate by humor, but actually gotten angry at me personally and made remarkably unfair statements about my intentions. I know in both cases the issue is one you seem to have tremendous personal investment in - the CAA - but that does not excuse it. I wish instead of that you would PM me and ask me what I meant, as you found out last time that you overreacted as well. Or in any case. Talk to me personally before you make a public attack. I was clearly not trying to attack you but to explain something that you were going on and on about with Tom (who was having to make the same point repeatedly to you in as many ways as he could) and when I saw you say "I give up", then "I'm back" and "I just can't quit" or whatever, I laughed (even though I felt sick as a dog) and thought of a way I could answer your question in a way that would escape the dense rhetoric and come across as more amiable (yet still debating). I guess I failed miserably in your eyes. I have - once again - gotten a lot of supportive PM's and calls from people I hardly know (before even having read your reply), so I know I'm not the only one who has this opinion. But since it bothered you personally, and you made your comments public instead of talking to me directly, I will answer your points and try to put you at ease on some issues (and I hope you will do the same for me on others, as you gracefully did last time).


I think you missed the point. While saying that, for example, 'vigorous' exercise is potentially harmful, and even subtler points, the CME at the same time recommends exercise as a functionally restorative therapy, suggests that patients may well not be doing enough activity, recommends graded activity or exercise, and recommends gradually increasing activity even for severely ill patients without the warning that for some gradual increase of any kind, or even unnecessary activity beyond what is physiologically monitored as appropriate, is contraindicated for many of these patients. Don't forget - for low functioning patients 'activity' means
'exercise'.

First of all, WOW. Chill, Cort! About a dozen people on this thread and a few dozen on others have suggested the same things and you didn't go "China Syndrome" on them! So merely suggesting something you feel is incorrect about the CME (it's an inanimate cyberspace object, not a person with feelings) is considered "a HUGE injustice" to YOU, personally?? (Re-read your sentence there. That's actually what you wrote!) And the alternative you offer is that merely suggesting something you feel is incorrect about your position is also a "HUGE" injustice to you. By that definition, Cort, you have done me and many other posters on this forum HUGE injustices at various times by suggesting that we hold positions that we absolutely, vehemently do NOT. On this thread alone, in the last few days, you have alienated several posters who have complained to me about your 'attacks', as some called them, in which you totally missed the point of their posts and accused them of holding a very different position - an opposite one - from those they had. I saw a few examples, but had decided in the interests of peace and quiet not to PM you about them, post about them or try reporting them. But here you have gone WAY too far, and someone has to call you on it, and no one else wants to.. so I guess the dude with the oxygen mask and an attitude has to!

Now, the above argument was just a matter of principle, by which you were also wrong, but I also want to be understood clearly myself... because you actually misunderstood the comments that you took offense to (again).

Please stop taking comments out of context; it would again be helpful if you at least sent me a PM to ask my meaning if it troubles you before you post angrily (and you post angrily a LOT Cort, which is stressing out a lot of people who have spoken to me... a lot of them are afraid to post on the CAA threads and at least four have told me at various times that they won't post anymore because of how aggressively you respond... I think we should be able to report that to moderators, though I don't think anyone believes that will work). I suppose posting 22 times in less than a day on a single thread (there should be a forum rule against that, by the way) would make it easy to forget some of the things you say. Or you say them wrong. I'm sure I say things wrong too; perhaps I did in this case, but if so the right thing to do would be to send me a polite PM asking my meaning. Anyway, when you read the first part of what I said:

you were supposed to carry this logic through the whole post , to my own experiences with doctors. Had you done that, I think you would have seen that I was trying to answer for Tom (who I agree with) that the CAA should not recommend any exercise or graded activity programs to physicians, NOT just because they are potentially harmful (which is where you stopped following what I was saying), but because any mentions of exercise or graded activity automatically prompt a majority of healthcare professionals to misleading ideas (usually stemming from preconceptions) about the nature of ME/CFS and distort their already easily distorted views of us and how to treat us. Enough people have already made this point to you, so I won't re-hash it. If you ask the same questions again and again, it is silly to criticize those who exasperatedly try to explain it, yet again, for 'beating a dead horse' or 'going over the same arguments again and again'.

If you are referring to the CME, then yes, I have read every section you have posted before you posted them, multiple times. As have many others here, who are some of our most knowledgeable advocates in the matter of exercise and ME/CFS, whose positions are identical to mine. There is too much in the CME that will lead too many health professionals directly to wrong conclusions about patients and exercise/activity. The worst is the "avoidance activity"/ kinesiophobia psychobabble. That is not only scientifically invalid and horribly unfair, but it is the last thing in the world you want to tell doctors if you expect them to heed "warnings" of the kind you refer to. Plus, as we keep having to tell you, the exercise stuff is unnecessary and in fact only encourages the common stupidities that many PWC have to endure.

(by the way, I really meant 'hombre' in a casual, friendly way. I say it all the time. I was trying to be casual and friendly. I am a casual and friendly guy. I thought you were, too, but I suppose a lot gets lost in internet communication. I thought by now you knew my personality well enough, though! People around here say you have no sense of humor, but I don't believe it. You're just very, very sensitive, and I will remember that.)

It sounds like you are willing that to be true! That is the most optimistic thing I have read in some time. :D Unfortunately, it is your opinion alone, based on what must be a limited or fortunate experience of standard (non-specialist) health professionals and clinicians, of whom I have (sadly) all too much real experience. I wish you were right, but that is wishful thinking.

By the way, in your original post that I responded to you were not talking about the CME alone... but if that's all we are talking about, see above.

Perhaps "sensitive" was not the right word, because this comment is just bizarre. This is the program that I and - how many others, from different continents? - have spent a lot of effort protesting about and then trying to organize some effort to correct, motivated by just how WRONG it was. You are in a minority of about one on this issue here, Cort, and you are well aware of that (those 30 something posts weren't directed at me) yet you singled me out for this comment. It would be more appopriate to say: "to all the forum members who have posted their criticisms of the CME and their personal, very painful negative experiences with some of the ideas propagated in it, I have this to say....". Instead, you favored a personal attack. I think that was doing me, and all of us by extension, a huge injustice - and I am not mocking you by repeating your words; I really mean it.

Who says you don't have a sense of humor? :D [*note - that was an attempt at humor*]

Okay, not cool. That comment implies underhanded motive and intent behind what I wrote. I believe that is a violation of Forum Rules. If it's not, it should be. It is unfair to me and unhealthy for this forum. I believe you should hold yourself to the same standards as other members, if you want us to feel like equal citizens of this community (which seems to be your vision as well). I would therefore appreciate an apology. You were very gracious in your last one. If you understand the need for this, you may reply privately or publicly. I prefer to talk one on one, where I am at my best. But since it has become public, maybe its better to air things out in public. The "CAA and Forum Debate: Double Standards?" thread that I had requested Kurt to start after that 'satire' nonsense was to address this very issue, among other things; I would recommend any conversation on this issue be continued there. Do whatever you think is right. For my part, I already said in the post itself and above in the first paragraph what my intention was. I never imagined that this post would upset you; I actually ran it by one of the most polite people on this forum first (because I wondered if humor would be misunderstood yet again) and even she thought it was fine, and thought I made the points well. And she's smarter than you and me put together!

A sense of humor is a very useful thing, by the way, and utterly necessary when your body, your family, and your life have been torn apart.

(I still think you have one, by the way! But I do believe you are a bit too emotionally involved in all things CAA to always see clearly in such discussions.)

I hope that the hostility that was being directed at particular forum members by you and maybe one or two others is over for good (and that I haven't just re-ignited it!) Those of us on the other "side" (what side??), i.e. who Cort has disagreed with, were not disrespectful to him at all, and their "anger" was directed only at the misrepresentation of our disease by the CAA. Personally, I just wanted to get stuff done, and didn't want this thread sidetracked like it frequently is by the "everybody argue with Cort" thing. I had prepared a post before the last one to address those issues, and to ask for some constructive action. I hope I will still be able to, and I'm sorry if I had to add more tension to this thread, but it's no fun being misunderstood and angrily responded to like that, even in the best of health, and I am so many miles from that.

I'm sorry to disturb your health. Believe me your post disturbed my health. For whatever reason, I was extremely upset by your post, like I haven't been for any of the others. Maybe I'm in a world of my own but my understanding was that the gist of your post was that I did not understand that vigorous exercise was potentially harmful to CFS patients......I guess I felt belittled in a way - that you would think I would not understand such a basic fact about CFS.

I realize that I do come on strongly at times but honestly I frequently get pms about my calmness in the midst of all this controversy.

Please do not portray this as a CAA thing for me.. It was a "How could you so misrepresent me thing?'. Or "how could you think such a thing about me?. Maybe I'm too touchy, but the first part of that post drove me up the wall like few I have ever experienced. It was sooo frustrating for me to read....

(I actually thought I did PM you...I wrote it out maybe I didn't send it. Perhaps I thought it wouldn't make any difference).

How ironic that we both felt this way

By that definition, Cort, you have done me and many other posters on this forum HUGE injustices at various times by suggesting that we hold positions that we absolutely, vehemently do NOT.

I think I can provide an answer to your worry. Honestly I tell you I have provided this answer many times in this thread and it is frustrating to have to do it again. But I think when you read this you'll understand that whatever your considerations about having an 'exercise program' in a doctor's protocol at all, that your concerns are largely taken care of - basically the program does not ask patients to do anything that exacerbates their symptoms.

without the warning that for some gradual increase of any kind, or even unnecessary activity beyond what is physiologically monitored as appropriate, is contraindicated for many of these patients.[/B] Don't forget - for low functioning patients 'activity' means
'exercise'.

The objective of exercise and activity management is to find a balance that allows patients to avoid postexertional malaise and prevent deconditioning so they can achieve better function and improved quality of life.

. It is important for patients to learn to recognize their own individual threshold of activity

Instruct patients to return to the most recent manageable level of activity if they report that exercise is worsening symptoms.[76]

CFS patients are advised to balance any activity with rest and to "experiment" with the level of activity that is tolerated to find their own personal threshold of activity.

CFS patients experience low stamina, debilitating fatigue, and postexertional malaise with even simple, everyday activities. It is important to balance activity with rest and markedly limit the amount of daily activity..

Here's for your consideration about activity and exercise

Advise patients to consider all the movement and activity they engage in, including personal grooming, grocery shopping, household chores, tasks performed during full- or part-time employment, anaerobic exercise, and aerobic exercise, when developing an energy management program.

Worsening of symptoms following even minimal exertion is a hallmark of the illness.
 

CBS

Senior Member
Messages
1,522
Cort, some of us are trying to critique a document we see as flawed. I think it is unheplul to keep dragging specific doctors names into it, and then sometimes going on to essentially re-organise these people's comments (or just plain change them) to make it appear as though some people are making (apparently) derogatory comments about doctors, when they are essentially making derogatory comments about an inanimate document that needs to be corrected. I think what you are doing is causing some unnecessary tension and upset in the thread.

Orla

Orla,

I am going to stick with the first part of your post. From my perspective, I hasn't been Cort who has tried to drag these doctors through the proverbial mud (I can give you a number of examples where the attacks have gone beyond a document to a person's qualifications and the adequacy of their experience). These doctors have given their lives to people with CFS. They aren't perfect but we would be NO WHERE without them. No CAA, NO CFSAC, NO IACFS/ME, NO PR, NO FORUMS.

I'm all for discussion of the issues. As for the personal attacks, what's so surprising when someone who knows the history as well as anyone does (and who has taken the time and expended the effort to sit down with everyone of the individuals that has been maligned and then created a forum to make all of the information available to us so that we can then parse every syllable looking for something to use as a weapon against those who have been on our side when no one else was even willing to see us) reacts in defense of these people who have given their lives for PWC?

Cort, Could you please just sit on the sidelines and stop interfering as we use the site you created to destroy the reputations of some (imperfect yet) very well meaning and devoted advocates? Your such a hot head.
 

Orla

Senior Member
Messages
708
Location
Ireland
Re criticisms of texts

I am totally in favour of not engaging in personal attacks, or over-criticisms, of doctors who are on our side. But if we don't critically analyse their work we are being unscientific, and our personal preferences and prejudices will influence our views too much.

And what are we to do if doctors who are on our side disagree (which they often do on some points)? How are we to make our minds up what the best position is, if we cannot attempt to dispassionately and objectively analyse their work and ideas? And they themselves change their minds on some issues over time. So if we just adopt the position of always agreeing with them, is it their earlier idea or later idea we are to agree with? And would not adopting one position or another mean we were saying they were wrong at some stage anyway? Or if they contradict themselves (which some do) which side are we meant to take?

I wrote posted some of this in the moderation thread, but I thought I would repost here, as I think that some people are mixing up critiques of texts, or scientific/medical arguments, with attacks on individuals, and becoming unnecessarily upset.

A critique of either a text, or someones academic/work position is not a personal attack. People need to be able to make a distinction between critiqing the work or someone and critiqing that person as a person. Otherwise we will all have to change our views with every blowing wind, as experts disagree (some people do this actually!).

There are plenty of good doctors out there who make errors, even serious ones. I have seen, heard (and experienced) many examples of this since I have become ill and have been involved in the groups. It can be quite eye-opening but does encourage one to be always questioning, even of the good guys, especially in terms of what they say about treatments.

.....Sorry forgot to say that it is not scientific to decide to agree with one doctor, or person, because one likes them, rather than focusing on what they are saying and deciding whether their idea or argument makes sense or not. Pesonally I try to be as objective and scientific in my approach as possible, as otherwise ones ideas will end up all over the place, subjective, and subject to far too much personal bias and personal experience. I know others do this also. This possibly comes across sometimes as a bit cold, or academic or something.

If we focus on the person's niceness etc. too much, rather than the argument, then it becomes almost like a personality contest, and then the arguments really are personal.

Sometimes doctors that are good say bad things, and sometimes doctors that are bad somehow manage to say useful/correct things. Some doctors manner isn't great but they can be quite good (I am not talking about abusive behaviour, which is a red flag, but some doctors can be a bit abrupt), and other doctors can appear nice and understanding but are not.
 

CBS

Senior Member
Messages
1,522
.....Sorry forgot to say that it is not scientific to decide to agree with one doctor, or person, because one likes them, rather than focusing on what they are saying and deciding whether their idea or argument makes sense or not. Pesonally I try to be as objective and scientific in my approach as possible, as otherwise ones ideas will end up all over the place, subjective, and subject to far too much personal bias and personal experience. I know others do this also. This possibly comes across sometimes as a bit cold, or academic or something.

If we focus on the person's niceness etc. too much, rather than the argument, then it becomes almost like a personality contest, and then the arguments really are personal.

You're right, I'm just a big sucker. It's far more scientific to judge an entire career and years worth of action based upon a sentence or two that may or may not represent someone's current position and may or may not even be presented in context.
 

jackie

Senior Member
Messages
591
Many of us (from our own past and in some cases continuing personal experiences with the Medical Profession) TRULY BELIEVE that the averge harried, overworked Doctor (however well intentioned) will be unlikely to pay attention to the warnings. (for a variety of reasons including many personal experiences from members).

And we are justifiably afraid of our concerns being ignored by Doctors. So...many of us apparently would prefer to reduce our "risks" of being encouraged to engage in behaviours that may permanently damage our systems, by having this information removed entirely. That is as simple as i can state. (this is imo...i'm not trying to speak for everyone...this is MY take on the multiple responses. did i get this right?) j
 

Cort

Phoenix Rising Founder
"The very definition of insanity is to keep doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results."
:D



YES!!!!

(Ding Ding Ding!!!!)

Finally, some progress!

Better late than never! Perhaps the 'dead' horse still lives.

Wait...uh oh...

I don't have to show you anything, for the answer lies curled within your own question. Tom wasn't merely saying that he doesn't "like" the idea of any kind of exercise program being included, I believe he was saying NO exercise program should be included because ANY exercise program is potentially HARMFUL to many patients! Yes, EVEN Dr. Bateman's! As you have (I Dearly Hope) read in countless testimonials from your fellow companions in Disease, many of them less fortunate in overall condition, ANY FORM OF EXERCISE, or of GRADED ANYTHING, can potentially be harmful, ESPECIALLY for the severely affected (and there are a lot of us Cort; you and I seem to move - well you move, I just lie down - in different circles...).

I'm fairly confident that Dr. Bateman herself would not apply a general recommendation like that to a patient like say, yours truly (I hope not anyway..:worried:). But I don't get to see Dr. Bateman, she's off in Mormon country somewhere, and Klimas is in Gator Country, and Lapp is in hillbilly country or something, so I have to settle for Joe Doctor most of the time. Joe doesn't read stuff the way you do Cort, nor the way I do, in fact he doesn't like to read at all now that he's out of med school and has all his board certifications. Joe isn't all that smart, not like Dr. Bateman, and he isn't all that caring, unlike Dr. Bateman. He has his own not-very-smart opinions on CFS that involve "oh god not one of those", something about women and hysteria, and a bit of stuff his psychiatrist friend told him over lunch. So when he sees the word "exercise" all he thinks is "alright Dr. Bateman, whoever you are, I can take it from here" and the rest is, as they say, history. Unfortunately, mine. And that of a hell of a lot of people on this forum.

Wait a minute now hombre, that statement is not clear. You use the word "experience" first to mean your "experience of reading" their programs, then use it to mean your "experience" = doctors will recognize that we can't do regular exercise. Are you saying that you have ACTUAL experience with doctors who have ACTUALLY read those VERY materials (CAA/Bateman) and they have ALL (how many doctors have you seen who read this stuff, anyway??) become enlightened as you described? Or are you using the term hypothetically (and incorrectly) to mean that you THINK doctors who read this will become so enlightened?

My experience with doctors has been bad enough (did I mention Joe?) that most of them wouldn't even read the CAA literature anyway, and even if they did they would see the words "graded" or "gradual" + "increase" together with "activity" and "deconditioning", and then it's "ah yes, that's what I thought"... And the prescription is a graded kick in the ass with an assist by a psychologist or psychiatrist (prompted by the mention of "cognitive behavioral therapy"), with a general refusal to be very helpful (if at all) with disability forms, requests for wheelchairs, etc (why do I need, say, an electric wheelchair if I can gradually increase my activity such that, by God, I should at least be able to push one myself..). Now don't tell him he's missing the good stuff in that literature, Cort, or missing the nuance or the overall point, because he's a busy man, he has other patients to see, and he doesn't have time to read the fine print.. Besides, he already has his own framework built up from years of clinical experience, young man, and this document only reinforces his belief that all I need is a graded kick in the ass after all.. There's nothing in there about the SPECT scans or smoldering viruses or whatever I keep babbling about, and.. Oh, he's sorry, he has to see another patient now.

And that, in a bit of hopefully informative hopefully humor, is the problem. Most of us aren't beating any damn 'dead horses' here; we are fighting to NOT wind up about as dead as dead horses, wherever we can and however we can. Trouble is, some folks who will remain nameless (Cort and the CAA and.. who's that riding in?? Say it ain't so!!) seem to have developed a mental block in these discussions. So I thought I would try a different method. In the past I have found some of you folks have broken senses of humor, but I think it is a very effective medication and communication tool, in the right hands. Which rules me out.

Oh well. Spam away, Mr. J!

ANY exercise program is potentially HARMFUL to many patients! Yes, EVEN Dr. Bateman's! As you have (I Dearly Hope) read in countless testimonials from your fellow companions in Disease, many of them less fortunate in overall condition, ANY FORM OF EXERCISE, or of GRADED ANYTHING, can potentially be harmful, ESPECIALLY for the severely affected

That was what so upsetting to me. I have repeatedly acknowledged this.....And now ..Ding! Ding! You're taking it upon yourself to be teach me and Dr. Bateman and Dr. Lapp et. all that this is so. I have provided quotes directly from the CME repeatedly demonstrating that they recognize this. Give me a little latitude for considerable frustration...

I know all of us, including me, are trying not to wind up as 'dead horses'. What I'm saying is that this program will not turn into a dead horse. It has factors in it that explicitly prevent that. Honestly its hard to be characterized as someone who is doing great harm to CFS patients.

As I read your post again my reactions are not so strong but I again I say to you that this program is designed to have your doctor NOT react as other doctors have. Doctors have to agree to do the program...its not like they're going to hear that the CME has an exercise component to it and say get on the bike. I don't know how they are going to hear that anyway but if they do read it they will recognize that exercise, at best, if very limited, is primarily anerobic, can have devastating consequences on CFS patients if done inappropriately and should not be done if it exacerbates their symptoms.

Can we agree on that?
 

CBS

Senior Member
Messages
1,522
What hasn't already been said on this subject?

The conversation here is no longer about the CAA but (at best) about individuals and their take on what has been said about the CAA.

Please, at the very least suspend this thread for a few days.
 

Dolphin

Senior Member
Messages
17,568
I am totally in favour of not engaging in personal attacks, or over-criticisms, of doctors who are on our side. But if we don't critically analyse their work we are being unscientific, and our personal preferences and prejudices will influence our views too much.

And what are we to do if doctors who are on our side disagree (which they often do on some points)? How are we to make our minds up what the best position is, if we cannot attempt to dispassionately and objectively analyse their work and ideas? And they themselves change their minds on some issues over time. So if we just adopt the position of always agreeing with them, is it their earlier idea or later idea we are to agree with? And would not adopting one position or another mean we were saying they were wrong at some stage anyway? Or if they contradict themselves (which some do) which side are we meant to take?

I wrote posted some of this in the moderation thread, but I thought I would repost here, as I think that some people are mixing up critiques of texts, or scientific/medical arguments, with attacks on individuals, and becoming unnecessarily upset.

A critique of either a text, or someones academic/work position is not a personal attack. People need to be able to make a distinction between critiqing the work or someone and critiqing that person as a person. Otherwise we will all have to change our views with every blowing wind, as experts disagree (some people do this actually!).

There are plenty of good doctors out there who make errors, even serious ones. I have seen, heard (and experienced) many examples of this since I have become ill and have been involved in the groups. It can be quite eye-opening but does encourage one to be always questioning, even of the good guys, especially in terms of what they say about treatments.

.....Sorry forgot to say that it is not scientific to decide to agree with one doctor, or person, because one likes them, rather than focusing on what they are saying and deciding whether their idea or argument makes sense or not. Pesonally I try to be as objective and scientific in my approach as possible, as otherwise ones ideas will end up all over the place, subjective, and subject to far too much personal bias and personal experience. I know others do this also. This possibly comes across sometimes as a bit cold, or academic or something.

If we focus on the person's niceness etc. too much, rather than the argument, then it becomes almost like a personality contest, and then the arguments really are personal.

Sometimes doctors that are good say bad things, and sometimes doctors that are bad somehow manage to say useful/correct things. Some doctors manner isn't great but they can be quite good (I am not talking about abusive behaviour, which is a red flag, but some doctors can be a bit abrupt), and other doctors can appear nice and understanding but are not.
Yes, that is my view also.

Challenging what a particular doctor says on particular things is not the same as dismissing their value entirely.

The hard lesson I've learned is that we shouldn't give away too much power - most doctors, whoever they are, will say problematic things some of the time. I'm not pushing for doctors to come up with guidelines in Ireland because I know they would very likely come up with guidelines that I don't think are fit for purpose. I don't simply sit around and moan - I do plenty of other things (like circulate guidelines from other countries which I think are good - which involves being involved in raising the money to do this, etc).

Unfortunately, it is not easy to come up with management guidelines on this illness. I accept that. But it's an important issue and issues relating to it shouldn't be pushed under the carpet.
 
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