Organix I think I hear them. I hear that 'exercise programs' hyped by the psych lobby are dangerous. I get that and I completely agree with that. That is my personal experience which is one reason why I've stuck in here so long. I, above all, do
not want to mischaracterized on this subject and I feel that if I leave the topic people will leave with the wrong impression.
What I'm saying is that this is
not that program. That its a very mild program, that its careful to educate doctors about the dangers of exercise, that its careful to not have patients overdo their activities, that it does not ask patients to push through their symptoms....and that it emphasizes post-exertional malaise from the very beginning of it.
I agree that most patients are overdoing it. I have overdone it physically for most of my life. I have experienced the muscle burning, orthostatic intolerance, inability to concentrate, increased sensitivities and horrendous fatigue that comes with what I hardly used to consider even mild exertion. I would never suggest that anyone do anything like that.
This is a lose-lose situation for me. I'm going to bow out.
Cort, I understand that you understand that exercise/activity isn't right for everyone, etc. That's not the issue, IMO.
What I don't think you get is that most patients don't want this kind of emphasis on ANY kind of exercise/activity "program" going into doctor education while there is no proof that it really helps anyone and there is the counterproductive, very real potential, that it harms some people as badly as being disabling or fatal.
I would propose that instead of ANY recommendations on exercise in doctor educational materials, they report the Drs Lights studies showing how PWCs bodies respond so extremely differently from other illnesses, not to mention "normals", and then teach them not to prescribe or encourage exercise AT ALL. The concerns of being "deconditioned" have been disproven over and over; PWCs are already doing all they can and are no more deconditioned than sedentary healthies, so why divert
any attention or energy towards an idea that basically only gives the docs the
illusion they are doing
something.
As for Bateman et al seeming to promote exercise programs, I wonder if they may have changed their minds since the Drs Light's studies came out? Or that they might be succombing to the impulse to provide docs with the illusion that they are doing something helpful?
Where some on the forum have gotten the impression that you're not listening is where you claim the CME materials WILL result in doctors understanding the perils of overdoing it, while many people here on the forum have provided personal examples of doctors NOT getting it. Dr Yes has said it so well...that docs just scan materials like this and pick up on a few key words
without getting the nuances.
Orla and I and others have repeatedly said that the topic of exercise in the ME/CFIDS patient is
premature and a distraction from research and treatments that are actually working for some people.
Since exercise doesn't help, isn't needed and can be disabling or even fatal, and doctors' assumptions about it are usually wrong, leave it out of CME materials.
(I have no doubt you are of good character and I haven't seen character assassination done on you, but I haven't read everything. I do think your sense of humor is underdeveloped, or a bit intolerant, but you're still OK with me, not that it's important that you should be. And thanks again for this forum! I actually agree with you on lots of things...it's just some very important things that we don't agree on that provoke me to post. Hugs to you from the loyal opposition!)