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Klimas, Wessely and NICE: Redefining CBT? | November 2006 |
by Margaret Williams (as sent to IiME)
Patent Foramen Ovale (PFO) is the
persistence (or the acquired re-opening) of the normal foetal
opening between the right and left atria of the heart.
In his September 2006 seminar (see
below), Dr Paul Cheney from North Carolina - who has seen over 5,000
patients with (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
-- states that PFO is "tightly associated" with (ME)CFS to the order
of at least 80% or more of patients.
The UK definition of CBT is
contained in the Chief Medical Officer's Working Group Report of
January 2002: "Cognitive behavioural
therapy is a tool for constructively modifying attitude and
behaviour". These psychiatrists believe it is such "faulty" beliefs that prevent people from recovering, therefore the "faulty" beliefs must be modified in order to get people who harbour misperceptions about their bodily sensations off welfare benefits and back into work. Patients who do not - or physically cannot-comply have had their benefits stopped.
Confusion about CBT in the
UK Given Pinching's published track
record, notably his article in Prescribers' Journal in 2000, this
seems to represent a significant shift, because in that article he
stated that CFS is not related to on-going exertion; that patients
should not be "over-investigated" because investigating them causes
them "to seek abnormal test results to validate their illness"; that
approaches can be "behavioural"
Noble-sounding words, but this sweet-talking does not stop the UK ME community from seeing such surreptitious amendment as a case of "Come into my parlour, said the spider to the fly", especially given that NHS Plus has not waited for the final NICE Guideline but has gone ahead and published its 64-page Policy Document referred to above (Occupational Aspects of the Management of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: a National Guideline". Department of Health: 6th October 2006: 273539) that is grounded entirely on the psychosocial model of ME/CFS and which recommends that patients who are still working should be advised to stay at work even if they feel "tired".
To accompany this Policy Document,
NHS Plus has produced three booklets: one for employers, one for
employees and one for healthcare professionals, all of which contain
misinformation about ME (about which the parent document states:
"The descriptive term CFS is preferable to previously used terms
such as post-viral fatigue syndrome or ME").
The booklet for employees says much the same:
The booklet for healthcare professionals is even more damaging:
Curiously, Professors Peter
White and Mike Sharpe seem to be somewhat confused: whilst on
the one hand they say that the effectiveness of CBT may be
limited by being in receipt of disability benefit, in the same
document they also say: "being in receipt of sickness benefit at
the start of treatment may be a marker of severity".
Also at the launch, Professor Komaroff said about the lingering belief that (ME)CFS is psychological and somehow imagined: "That debate raged for 20 years, and now it's over".
Importantly, distinctions were
drawn to the two different types of (ME)CFS: one that occurs
immediately after an infection and one that develops gradually
over time, and to the fact that the two types seem to differ
genetically.
However, when it comes to treatment, there seems to be confusion, with Klimas saying at the launch:
This seems at variance with her previous on-the-record views about CBT, for example:
How is it that in 2003, Klimas said
that a competent physician would give his patient common sense
counselling in coping strategies, but three years later she now says
the same patient should be handed over for psychotherapy? Klimas is also on record as saying at the CDC:
On the matter of management, some of what the Toolkit says is hardly
controversial, namely that the objective of an effective management
programme is threefold: (1) to help patients develop effective
coping strategies (2) to relieve symptoms and (3) to teach patients
to manage activity levels so as to avoid post-exertional malaise on
the one hand and deconditioning on the other.
As in the UK, there seem to be a confusing divergence about the
nature of CBT for those with (ME)CFS.
For illustrations of the
pliability of Wessely School opinions about the efficacy of CBT
depending on the country in which they were delivered, see
http://www.meaction The following notes, taken from
Cheney's DVD (a two disc boxed set: for details, send an email to
videos@dfwcfids.
This fascinated Cheney, who in 2003
underwent a successful heart transplant because of dilated
cardiomyopathy, as a result of which he had observed at first hand
the spiralling effects on differing body systems of low cardiac
output.
Key scientific articles
Phase 2: (the centre of gravity of this illness: fatigue, brain problems and pain; xenobiotic toxicity coming from the gut and the environment)
Phase 3: (the brain and heart component)
Phase 4: (phenotypic and genotypic adapatation à oxidative stress)
Oxidative stress links (ME)CFS to
fibromyalgia, multiple chemical sensitivity and Gulf War Syndrome.
In phase 2: one sees
In phases 3 and 4: the most interesting are the metabolic disturbances:
These findings portend significant
physiological issues, chief of which is that oxygen is being
prevented from getting into the cell, and if there's no oxygen,
there's no energy.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Mixed venous blood gas picture
This is a differential hypoxia with
hypercarbia. There are only two diseases where this is seen: one is
pulmonary hypertension; the other is (ME)CFS.
Prolonged energy deficits can
cause semi-permanent DNA phenotype adaptations and complications
can occur, especially within energy-sensitive systems such as
the heart, the brain and the muscles.
PFOs cause significant instability.
In the meantime, as NICE has
also been informed, patients urgently need practical support
services, including help with personal care, shopping,
housework, cooking, adaptations in the home (such as a
chairlift) ie. basic support for the very ill.
To read the IiME response to the NICE guidelines click here. Share your comments on the NICE Guidelines click here. |