Guest guest Posted June 18, 2008 Report Share Posted June 18, 2008 PERMISSION TO FORWARD, REPOST & USE IN NEWSLETTERS. Please urge your listowner to post everything even - perhaps especially - things they personally do not agree with for fair balance. If any of my postings is being censored, or selectively edited out, by a listowner, you may wish to join my M.E. Chums list to get the whole unbiased picture. ------------------------------ Reply to an article about Lynne Garnham, who has written a book after being diagnosed with M.E. as well as long-standing stress-related illnesses (link below my signature). I am concerned that, the way this is written, it will be assumed that M.E. ALWAYS a stress-related, or psychiatric, illness. If anyone has the energy to reply, you should go to the online form here http://www.peterleemail.co.uk/contactus.aspx tick the box for Editor and make sure you say it is a letter intended for publication. Cheers drjohngreensmith@... *lee Mail Letters*. Lynne Garnham is a very exceptional example of a person who has been diagnosed with M.E. (*Myalgic Encephalomyelitis*) on top of her long-standing stress related illnesses of anxiety and agoraphobia (*Facing life's traumas to help others, lee Mail, 17 June 2008*). The vast majority of people with M.E. started with a viral infection, like glandular fever, chicken pox or pneumonia; or had a vaccination such as TB, hepatitis, or polio; or were poisoned by some chemicals, perhaps in the environment, or due to crop spraying but they did not have a history of psychiatric illness. It must not be assumed, therefore, either: that M.E. has a psychiatric cause, or that M.E. causes symptoms of any psychiatric illness, for example, clinical depression. So, while a process of deconditioning, in which Lynne faced her fears, may have helped her (though it doesn't work for everyone), it would not be suitable for M.E. sufferers - what fear have they to face? - and it is illogical to hope that Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT), developed for treating people with psychiatric illnesses, such as anxiety and depression, will be of any value to them. There is no evidence that CBT has any lasting benefit, without relapse, for people with M.E. Contrary to the conventions of research, trials are still going on while CBT is already recommended, a practice that would be quite unacceptable, for example, in drugs testing. The more intelligent, scientific, approach would be to properly publicly fund biomedical research, to better understand the cause of M.E. in the hope of suggesting an appropriate treatment, instead of adopting CBT as a panacea, as this government has done because it is fashionable and cheap, albeit unproven and generally ineffective. Yours sincerely drjohngreensmith@... Dr H Greensmith ME Free For All. org Facing life's traumas to help others (lee Mail, 17 June 2008) *http://tinyurl.com/4nv2yf* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.