CBT
and GET - A Few Things to Think About
Update on CBT/GET |
Update 12th May
2007 |
At the
recent Invest in ME international conference held in London on 1st-2nd
May 2007, the issue of the ME Centres arose. In his usual robust
manner, Professor Malcolm Hooper was critical of them (on the basis
that they cannot possibly help those with complex neurological
disease to recover and the only regime they offer -- CBT/GET --
could be potentially dangerous for some people with ME/CFS). He was
dismayed to hear from one or two attendees that the Centres were
better than nothing at all, a sentiment with which he disagrees. He
was even more dismayed to hear the view from some attendees that the
Centres should be supported by the ME/CFS community on the grounds
that if patients do not attend these Centres, they will forfeit
their entitlement to State and insurance benefits.
When the
Countess of Mar became aware of such a view, she was reported to
have remarked that if this state of affairs is true, it is
illegal.
Lady Mar
was therefore asked directly if she had said this, and by email on
11th May 2007 she replied:
“During the Committee Stage of
the Welfare Reform Bill – debates from Clause 9 onwards in the
Lords, I managed to extract from the Minister statements to the
effect that people with CFS/ME would not be forced to do CBT/GET
in order to continue to get their benefits”.
That debate
is recorded in Hansard (Lords) on 28th February 2007,
column GC198:
Countess of Mar: |
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"If
a group of people refuses graded exercise and cognitive
behaviour therapy, on the basis either that they are
afraid or that they know it will not help them, will
they be penalised?" |
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|
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Lord McKenzie of Luton (Parliamentary Under-Secretary,
Department for Work and Pensions; Labour Peer): |
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"there is no requirement for individuals to carry out
any specific type of activity or treatment. That cannot
be sanctioned". |
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The following has
been designed to support M.E. sufferers who choose
not to
attend the current NHS Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis clinics which have been set up across the
country.
These clinics have been
based upon the Chief Medical Officer’s report from 2002 and many of
them promote mainly
psychological therapies such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Graded
Exercise (GET).
This document may also
support M.E. patients who refuse to participate in the
PACE and FINE trials which have
been set up by the Medical Research Council, and which also endorse
psychological therapies.
People with ME who are
bed bound or housebound, and who are advised to have these therapies on domiciliary visits, may also
find this document helpful.
It may also help those pressurised to undertake CBT
and graded exercise by Private Health Insurers.
SAYING NO CAN BE
POSITIVE
Those who wish
to refuse psychological therapies for M.E.
can be supported by the following facts:-
1)
The law
protects patients from unwanted treatments Medical
practitioners cannot give a treatment to a
patient without the patient’s consent.
2) Private Health Insurers cannot force an
M.E. client to undergo unwanted treatment
before making a payment, unless those
treatments are specified in the contract Unless the
contract of a company states clearly that
M.E. clients must undergo CBT and/or graded
exercise before a payment is made, the
company could well be in breach of contract.
Also, every individual has freedom to
express views as stated by The Human Rights
Act 1998. If an insurance company ignores a
client’s reasons for refusing CBT and/or
graded exercise, a client could claim their
‘freedom of expression’ has been
violated
[i].
3) An M.E. patient cannot have their state
benefits withdrawn for refusing CBT and
graded exercise.
U.K. law says
that if a patient refuses suitable treatment
without good cause, benefits can be
withdrawn
[ii].
However, CBT and graded exercise could be
argued as unsuitable treatments for M.E.
sufferers (see facts below).
4)
M.E. is a
neurological disorder It has been classified as such by the
World Health Organisation in the
International Classification of Diseases
since 1969
[iii].
Therefore psychological therapies could well
be inappropriate.
5) M.E. has a strong medical history of
being an organic disease Dr.Gordon Parish is the curator of the
Ramsey Archive, which is possibly the
world’s largest collection of medical papers
on M.E. [iv]. It includes detailed world-wide epidemics
of M.E. since 1934 and the viruses which
triggered the disease.
6)
Many
tests exist in aiding a diagnosis for M.E.
Therefore, using psychological therapies for
‘unexplained fatigue’ is inappropriate Although diagnostic tests for M.E. are still
being worked upon with promise, nevertheless
many tests and procedures can be
administered in aiding a diagnosis of M.E.
These include the use of SPECT, MRI and PET
scans, test for NK cell activity and
endocrine abnormalities, Tilt Table Test,
viral tests and many more [v].
Although these tests aren’t always offered
by the NHS for M.E., they have nevertheless
shown evidence of physical abnormalities.
7)
“Patients
who improve after physical exercise
programmes do not have M.E./CFS.,”
says Dr. Byron Hyde, M.D. of the
Nightingale Research Foundation for M.E.
in Canada, who has studied M.E. since
1984
[vi].
Dr. Hyde stresses that M.E. is primarily a
disease of the Central Nervous System
[vii].
8)
Patients
who
respond well
to CBT and graded exercise might not have
M.E. due to the diverse criteria used. Some
criteria focus on unexplained chronic
fatigue only, omitting symptoms showing
central nervous system involvement There are at
least ten definitions of Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome
[viii].
In the U.K., a frequently used case
definition is the
Oxford Criteria
which includes patients with no
physical signs and selects subgroups of
patients with high levels of psychiatric
diagnoses
.[ix]
The
PACE and FINE trials use the Oxford Criteria. [x]
9)
The
assumption that an M.E. patient can
always do
more is an erroneous one
There are
overwhelming international research findings
on M.E., which support multi-system
involvement particularly of the immune,
endocrine, cardiovascular and neurological
systems. [xi]
Also, there is evidence indicating
pathology of the central nervous system and
immune system [xii]
and evidence of metabolic dysfunction in the
exercising muscle. [xiii]
Also, Dr. Jay Goldstein has demonstrated
through SPECT scans the severely decreased
brain perfusion of an M.E. patient 24 hours
after physical exercise. [xiv]
The Canadian Criteria (2003) states that
the worsening of symptoms after exertion is
a principal symptom of M.E.
[xv] Raised
levels of noxious by-products of abnormal
cell membrane metabolism, associated with
exercise and correlating with patients’
symptoms have been demonstrated.[xvi]
10)
CBT and
Graded Exercise can worsen M.E. symptoms
In a survey of 3074 M.E./CFS patients
conducted between 1998 – 2001,
55% of patients said that CBT
had made no
difference to their illness, whilst 22% said
CBT had made their illness
worse. 16%
of patients said that Graded Exercise had
made no difference to their
illness
whilst 48% said it had made their illness
worse
[xvii]
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A survey by the 25% ME Group (for severe
sufferers) of 437 patients, demonstrated
that of the 39% of group members who had
used graded exercise, 95% had found this
therapy unhelpful, whilst -
82% reported their condition had
been made worse by
graded exercise.
Some
patients were not severely ill with M.E.
until after graded
exercise.
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In the same survey -
93% of those who had undergone
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy had
found it unhelpful
[xviii]
|
See also the
ME Conference 2006 DVD.
11)
The CMO’s Report recommended CBT and graded
exercise despite the objection of two
patient support groups
The patient
support groups of BRAME (Blue Ribbon for the
Awareness of ME) and the 25% ME Group
refused to endorse the CMO’s Report of 2002
based on its recommended treatments of CBT
and graded exercise. These support groups
mainly represent the needs of severe M.E.
sufferers and were part of the CMO’s Working
Group.
12)
Medical
Concerns have been raised about the CMO’s
Report
The Journal of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, [xix]
mentions criticism by health
professionals and the public of both the
British and the Australian M.E./CFS
guidelines.
“These
criticisms included claims of bias in the
recommendations toward a psychiatric outcome
and failure to understand the limitations of
patients to perform exercise programs as
well as many others.” |
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[i]
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The Human Rights Act 1998, European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, Section
1, Article 10,
no.1 |
[ii]
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U.K.
law on state benefits, Regulation 18 Social Security
(Incapacity For Work) Regulations. A similar law applies to
other state benefits for sickness and disability. |
[iii]
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World Health Organisation - International Classification of
Diseases 10-G93.3 |
[iv]
|
What is ME? What is CFS? Information For Clinicians and
Lawyers, Dec. 2001, Marshall, Williams, Hooper, page 11.
Available from Prof. Malcolm Hooper, Dept.of Life Sciences,
University of Sunderland SR2 7EE |
[v]
|
Leaflet A Physician’s Guide to Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, The Nightingale Research
Foundation, Vol.1, Issue 7, revised, 1992, page 17. Also,
Journal of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Vol . II,
No.1, 2003, Canadian Criteria, page 25, The Haworth Press
Inc. |
[vi]
|
Ibid., A Physician’s Guide to Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, page 25 |
[vii] |
Clinical
Observations of Central Nervous System Dysfunction in
Post-Infectious, Acute Onset
M.E./CFS,
page 38,
The Clinical and Scientific Basis of Myalgic
Encephalomyelitis Chronic Fatigue Syndrome 1992,
Byron Marshall Hyde, M.D., The Nightingale Research
Foundation.
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[viii] |
Report from the National Task Force on Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome, Westcare, Bristol 1994. This states nine
definitions: the recent Canadian definition in 2003 makes
ten. |
[ix]
|
Katon & Russo, 1992; Freiberg, 1999,
Unhelpful Counsel?
MERGE’s response to the CMO report on CFS/ME,
2002, p15. |
[x] |
See the website of the Medical Research Council at
www.mrc.ac.uk |
[xi]
|
ME and/or CFS paper, September 2001, page 1, V.A.
Spence PhD, Chairman of MERGE ( ME Research Group for
Education and Support). This paper quotes from several
published findings. Available from MERGE, The Gateway, North
Methven Street, Perth PH1 5PP |
[xii] |
The Biology of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Prof. Anthony
Komaroff, The American Journal of Medicine
2000: 108: 99-105. |
[xiii] |
Mitochrondrial abnormalities in the postviral fatigue
syndrome, Behan, W.M.H. et al., Acta Neuropathologica
83, 1991, pages 61-65. |
[xiv] |
The Negative Effects of Exercise on an M.E./CFS
Dysfunctional Brain, page vii, The Clinical and
Scientific Basis of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome 1992, Byron Marshall Hyde, M.D., The
Nightingale Research Foundation. |
[xv] |
Journal of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Vol. 11, No.1, 2003,
Canadian Criteria, page 22, The Haworth Press Inc. |
[xvi] |
Oxidative stress levels are raised in Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome and are associated with clinical symptoms, Kennedy,
Spence, Belch, Free Radical Biology & Medicine
2005:39:584-589 |
[xvii] |
Directly from the Horses’ Mouths, Doris M. Jones MSc,
Reference Group Member, CMO’s Working Group. This survey was
part of the Working Group on ME/CFS set up by the Chief
Medical Officer Sir Kenneth Calman in 1998. |
[xviii] |
Analysis Report by 25% ME Group March 2004
www.25megroup.org |
[xix] |
see footnote 15, page 2 of the Editorial . |
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Meanwhile if any readers have any experiences please
contact us.
Invest in ME -
Supporting ME Awareness
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