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Archive for the ‘Lightning Process’ Category

Times: Reference to ME patient and threat of legal action, 10 November 2009

Posted by meagenda on November 10, 2009

Private Eye: Critics of the Lightning Process, report on Legal News Page

Times: Reference to ME patient and threat of legal action, 10 November 2009

WordPress Shortlink: http://wp.me/p5foE-2lP

Private Eye’s Legal News page reported a couple of weeks ago that critics of Phil Parker’s Lightning Process had received letters threatening legal action. Private Eye provides no source(s) for this claim and to the best of my knowledge no-one has come forward yet with documentary evidence confirming this report.

(Report courtesy ME Association)

http://www.meassociation.org.uk/content/view/1063/161/

M.E. and the Lightning Process in ‘Private Eye’

There’s a small item in the latest issue of ‘Private Eye’ about M.E. and the Lightning Process. It’s on page 10 in the ‘Legal News’ section.

It reads:

“M.E. sufferers were stunned recently to receive threatening letters when they posted their views on the ‘Lightning Process’, a programme that allegedly produces ‘amazing results’ for people not only with M.E. but ‘anxiety, panic attack, over-eating, low self-esteem and guilt’ too. When sufferers started reporting they had paid £600 for a course that did not work for them, they received warning of defamation proceedings if they did not recant.”

If anybody has received a letter like that, we would be interested in seeing a copy.

Today, the Times has published a piece by John Kampfner, Chief executive of Index on Censorship and author of Freedom for Sale.

Mr Kampfner writes, “One man who runs a patients’ website was threatened with legal action by a drugs company after posting a comment that a treatment he had tried for ME had not worked. He had to take down his observation.”

Readers who are ME patients or carers of ME patients and have received threats of legal action from any source following complaints about therapies, training programmes, treatments or pharmaceuticals are invited to contact ME agenda, in confidence.

——————–

Times  |  10 November 2009

Times Link: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article6910168.ece

The laws that stain Britain’s good name
Libel tourism isn’t just a matter for the media elite. Freedom of speech for everyone is in danger
by John Kampfner

——————–

Read full article here on Times site

Link: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/guest_contributors/article6910168.ece

Full article can also be read here on Index on Censorship

Link: http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2009/11/libel-reform-the-laws-that-stain-britains-good-name/ 

The report can be downloaded at: http://www.libelreform.org/our-report

“The Libel Reform coalition brings together English PEN Index on Censorship and our partner organisation Sense About Science to campaign to reform the libel laws of England and Wales.”

Supporters of Libel Reform include:

Ian Hislop, Editor Private Eye
Alan Rusbridger, Editor, The Guardian
Peter Wright, Editor, Mail on Sunday
Ben Goldacre, Columnist, The Guardian, “Bad Science” Blog

Posted in Lightning Process, ME Association, ME in the media | Comments Off

RiME: Newsletter No. 11

Posted by meagenda on November 2, 2009

Paul Davis of RiME has recently issued a Newsletter.

WordPress Shortlink: http://wp.me/p5foE-2iE

RiME Newsletter No. 11

Permission to Repost

Campaigning for Research into ME (RiME)  www.rime.me.uk

RiME Newsletter No. 11 is now available. Items include:

ME: Activism + Organisation: The Need for Change

MPs Referendum on ME Research

NHS Services Inquiry: RiME Bank of Evidence

ME Association – Running with Hare and Hounds?

What does Lady Mar stand for? Forward-ME Condemned

MRC – Freedom of Information

Lightning Process

Conservatives + Lib Dems – latest.

If you want a copy posted to you, please send SAE plus 4 unused postage stamps (the few who have sent contributions over last year will get it anyway).

In order to survive, RiME depends on contributions from its supporters. We welcome unused postage stamps.

Paul Davis

10 Carters Hill Close, Mottingham, London, SE9 4RS   rimexx@tiscali.co.uk  

www.rime.me.uk

Posted in APPG on ME, CFS Clinics, CFS Clinics Inquiry, Countess of Mar, Freedom of Information, Lightning Process, ME Association, ME in Parliament, MRC, NHS service provision inquiry, Protests, RiME | Comments Off

RiME: Lightning Process – request for experiences

Posted by meagenda on October 6, 2009

Campaigning for Research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (RiME)

From Paul Davis www.rime.me.uk

Lightning Process – request for experience

I had hoped to get a newsletter out this summer. But owing to infections, it will be the autumn now, health permitting.

I want to include a piece on the Lightning Process. If you have had any experience of it or know anyone who has, please get in touch.

NB Has your MP signed the MPs Referendum on ME Research? – for more details see website. If not, please contact them.

Paul Davis  rimexx@tiscali.co.uk   www.rime.me.uk

——————–

Please note that all responses should be sent to Paul Davis of RiME at the email address above.  ME agenda is unable to enter into any correspondence around the Lightning Process or undertake to forward emails.

Related information:

ME Association: Summary Board of Trustees meeting 7, 8 September 09  Section: OTHER ME/CFS MEETINGS

GOSH gives platform to Lightning Process

 

Posted in Lightning Process, ME Research, ME in Parliament, RiME | Comments Off

RSM “Medicine and me” event: Commentary by John Sayer

Posted by meagenda on July 25, 2009

Royal Society of Medicine “Medicine and me” event on ME and CFS held Saturday, 18 July 2009

Commentary

John Sayer (Chair, M.E. Support-Norfolk)

25 July 2009

The half-day conference was organised jointly by the Royal Society of Medicine, the MEA, AfME, AYME, the 25% ME Group and TYMES Trust.

The promotional literature informed us that:

“‘Medicine and me’ conferences, initiated and developed by the Royal Society of Medicine, are specifically designed for patients. These meetings bring together patients, their families, carers, advocates, patient support groups, clinicians and researchers to discuss care and research issues in a particular condition…[and]…aim to provide a forum in which patients’ concerns about their illness are given top priority.”

Unfortunately, the pattern of the day – two presentations at a time followed by a five-minute slot for questions – did not really provide for much in the way of patient-led questions and/or discussion. It was, however, an opportunity to see what the various bodies involved had to say for themselves (and encouraging to hear Jane Colby of TYMES Trust underline in her welcome address that the title of the proceedings was “Medicine and me: ME *and* CFS”).

(This write-up is based on notes taken at the time by myself and Gus Ryan.)

Session 1 was chaired by Dr Charles Shepherd (MEA), who reminded us that there had been two parliamentary meetings [i.e. the All-Party Parliamentary Group on ME and the Countess of Mar's ForwardME Group] earlier in the week and that people still had a chance to submit written evidence to the APPGME’s NHS service provision inquiry.

Dr Abhijit Chaudhuri (of the Essex Centre for Neurosciences) spoke on “A rational, efficient and practical approach to diagnosis”. He said that ‘CFS’ represents a wide group of patients and the term does not help matters; that there should be earlier diagnosis, perhaps three months into illness onset (six weeks where children are concerned). He does not think the NICE Guideline has helped. In his view, post-exertional malaise, muscle cramps and *well preserved motivation and interest* (my emphasis) are key symptoms of M.E. and referral should be to a neurologist, since even psychiatrists admit that roughly 10% of ‘CFS’ sufferers have a neurological problem. He said that we need a national centre and funding for it (Romford being a treatment – not research – centre). His talk ended with a slide presentation of inflammation of the dorsal root ganglion, which he pointed out was “the gatekeeper of sensations”.

In the question slot Ciaran Farrell asked how we could change the NHS – to much applause from the audience. Dr Chaudhuri repeated that we need a national research centre.

“M.E. in children and adolescents” was presented by Shannen Dabson, a teenager whose story struck a particular chord with me as a teacher (prior to M.E.). She has had M.E. for six years, and now has very little trust in adults, having received virtually no respect for herself and her diagnosis. She found herself “written off” by her school, who didn’t send her work, didn’t mark the work she managed to do, didn’t send her the school newsletters or keep her informed of such things as the school photographs (which was the part that had me closest to tears, as I’d suffered the same treatment from my last employer: I will never forgive them for my absence from the school photograph of my form pupils; for both Shannen and me, it was like being airbrushed out of history). Shannen had had to make her own arrangements for taking exams, as her school refused to enter her on the grounds of a poor attendance record. To her admirable credit, she got six GCSEs anyway! I’m hoping to reproduce her talk for “MES-N” members, as it should be inspirational, especially for youngsters. She came up with what I personally consider to be a very practical, appropriate and *scientifically sound* slogan: “Work smarter, not harder!”

Hardip Begol (of the Department for Children, Schools and Families) spoke on “Addressing the educational impact of ME”, and said that Shannen’s situation is all too common from an educational point of view and that it was difficult to make teachers believe in ME/CFS. No personal disrespect to Mr Begol, but it struck me that what he had to say in his presentation did not have all that much immediate relevance, being, as one might expect, current government ‘fudge’. His comments were not actually specific to M.E., but here’s hoping that the conference gave him something to think about and take back to the DfCSF (though I’m not really holding my breath on that one).

In the question slot following these two talks Mary-Jane Willows (of AYME) said that the balance of power was with schools and Jane Colby pointed out that parents are too afraid to complain. (Personal note – no wonder, with the spectre of Social Services waiting in the wings, ready to pounce.)

Catriona Courtier (of the West London M.E. Self Help Group) spoke on “Treatment: the patient’s perspective”. She has had M.E. for twenty six years and her daughter is also ill. She reminded us that an AfME survey revealed that patients received very little proper treatment and that an MEA survey demonstrated that graded exercise therapy (GET) was the most dangerous form. She is ‘anti-NICE’. She said that staff at her local clinic *want* to help – but are misinformed.

Prof Anthony Pinching of the Peninsula Medical School, Plymouth, spoke on “Treatment – evidence-based and pragmatic approaches” and thinks that things are changing for the better. In his view, M.E. is a physical illness with psychological consequences and that people should work together and “not lob bricks at each other”. He said that the Cornwall service does make home visits. He advocates a ’symptom-control’ approach: which symptoms does a patient want most help with? I found him to be a bit vague and general, really, and he seemed to be saying that every individual needs different treatment (including psychological approaches), to be negotiated between patient and physician, and seemed to imply that success depended on the doctor-client relationship (which I personally find a bit too New-Agey: “permission to be ill and permission to have fun whilst you’re ill”). He did, however, say that there is a need for “building M.E. into the medical curriculum” (note – although it depends on exactly *what* is built in!). In response to a question about CBT from Dr Charles Shepherd, he indicated that such treatment should be ‘individualised’.

In the question slot Dr Chaudhuri expressed disagreement with Prof Pinching, saying that patients are *not* listened to and that the NICE Guideline is aimed at a *broad* group – these points being applauded by the audience. Prof Pinching responded that the NICE Guideline is not perfect, but should be used “to best effect”.

After a short (very short!) break, Sir Peter Spencer (Chief Executive Officer, AfME) chaired Session 2.

Dr Neil Abbott (ME Research UK) spoke on “Research: what do patients want and why isn’t it happening?” He suggested that the RSM host a biomedical conference on M.E. (Applause!) He said that the psychosocial model is predominant in the UK, although not quite so much in the US. He quoted Prof Simon Wessely with reference to psychosocial interventions: “certainly, those interventions are not the answer to CFS”. MERUK survey reveals that research on mitochondria, RBCs, immune cells, muscles, blood vessels, genes and brain are wanted; that this is not  “sexy” illness. ‘ME/CFS’ label is a problem: it is a process of elimination and that leads to a dustbin diagnosis. He is critical of the psychosocial approach, which is applicable to *all* illnesses (used to manage symptoms) and not specific to M.E. The real problem, in his view, is lack of funding.

Prof Stephen Holgate (University of Southampton) spoke on “ME: a research orphan for too long”. He said we need research because too little is known [sic] and said that the history of M.E. has dictated a mental health approach, it being perceived as having evolved from neurasthenia ['nervous debility']. He said, “It’s a system disorder” and that ‘omics’ should be used – i.e. genomics, proteomics and metabolomics. He referred to ‘ME/CFS’ as a “condition or conditions (25 or more)”; that the government won’t allow integrated research. He is putting together a workshop in November (the Medical Research Council Interdisciplinary Expert Group on M.E.), a systematic review deciding priorities, saying that a collaborative needs to be formed from charities [sic], the MRC and researchers, and that there is a need to ‘join up’ patients from clinics/centres. [Personal note: it all seemed to me a bit like reinventing the wheel and I have my misgivings about not only which 'charities' will be invited to participate but also the calibre of patients from the clinics/services.]

Dr David Misselbrook (Dean of the RSM) then invited questions to the panel of speakers. An elderly neuroscientist and his grandson tried to deliver a plug for the Lightning Process, the grandson claiming we had “wasted all this time talking when a cure has already been found” [sic], but Dan [from "M.E. Support-Norfolk"] pointed out that we hadn’t come all this way to hear a sales pitch for LP and Jane Colby expressed serious misgivings about success claims, citing an example of further harm caused to a patient; she also pointed out that no one can legally claim recompense if LP doesn’t cure a patient as it is not offered as a treatment, but a ‘training’.

Ciaran Farrell challenged Prof Holgate’s ‘history’ of M.E. but Prof Holgate said he had been misunderstood, that it wasn’t his own belief that M.E. was a form of neurasthenia and that he agreed with Ciaran, adding that he wanted to get rid of the terms “CFS” and “M.E.” [whatever that implies!].

In “Closing remarks”, Mary-Jane Willows said that there should be quick diagnosis, raising of awareness and no “one size-fits-all” approach. Doris Jones (of the 25% ME Group) read out a list of M.E. sufferers who have died and requested a minute’s silence in their memory, which was dutifully observed.

All in all, in my own opinion? A worthwhile day in order to find out what is going on in various quarters, but throughout the proceedings I did wonder who the ‘target audience’ was supposed to be, and for whose benefit this had all been arranged. Was it a ‘box-ticking’, ‘patient consultation’ exercise? The subtitle of the event, “Hearing the patient voice”, was a bit misleading, since we were mostly being talked at, not listened to; there certainly wasn’t enough time, as I said at the beginning, for much questioning or discussion. But maybe some of what was said will pay dividends. Fingers crossed.

John Sayer, Chair
M.E. Support-Norfolk

M.E. Support-Norfolk

————————-

Ed Notes:

1] Terms of Reference for the MRC’s Interdisciplinary Expert Group on M.E. have yet to be agreed (FOI Act).

2] ME agenda is unable to enter into correspondence around the Lightning Process.

Posted in 25% ME Group, APPG on ME, AYME, AfME, Action for M.E., CBT, CBT/GET, CFS Clinics, CFS Clinics Inquiry, CFS Research, Child protection, Lightning Process, ME Association, ME Research, ME Research UK, ME events, ME in children, MRC, NICE CFS/ME guideline, Prof Holgate, Royal Society of Medicine, Simon Wessely, The Young ME Sufferers Trust | Comments Off

Invest in ME: Statement regarding Forward-ME

Posted by meagenda on July 23, 2009

The Minutes of the last meeting of the Forward-ME group (a caucus group to the APPG on ME, convened and chaired by the Countess of Mar) held on Wednesday 8 July, at the House of Lords, can be read here on ME agenda or here on the website of Forward-ME.

Invest in ME, who are members of this group, have issued a statement in connection with Forward-ME and the last meeting of the group:

Invest in ME

[Forward-ME] Meeting 8th July 2009

IiME were not able to attend the meeting of this group on 8th July 2009 in London. As for every other meeting we submitted our comments to the Countess of Mar and all other members of this group in advance.

1 Attendance at Meetings and Visibility of Comments

We would like to return to our previous email (submitted in an email on 12th December 2008) where we stated the following -

We understand that, as we were unable to attend the last meeting, any decisions made at the meeting would not include our vote.

However, we see no reference in the minutes of either of the meetings to show that our views, as submitted in documentary form prior to each of the meetings, have been discussed or included in the discussions.

We would like to see that our comments have been entered into the discussions. Will the minutes reflect this?

We never received any response from our email of 23rd March.

2 GOSH medical meeting on ME/CFS in September to be discussed and the subject of Lightning Process

In the next meeting the subject of the GOSH at a day long medical meeting on ME/CFS in September is to be discussed and the subject of Lightning Process.

Mary-Jane from AYME has written “I share your concerns about this (LP) being included in the meeting”

We find this strange and hypocritical.

AYME have advertised LP for its members and freely allow discussion without seemingly making any critical comment on the lack of a research base, the numerous cases where people have been made worse and the fact that the practitioners of LP are generally not registered healthcare practitioners and take no responsibility for the results.

To state that there are concerns seems to us to be hypocrisy.

One should also remember that AYME and AfME are not in a position to criticise GOSH for including behavioural therapies/businesses as most of their recent joint conference in Milton Keynes included known advocates of the behavioural causality for ME and also included an insurance company representative.

3 Questions for Esther Crawley CNRCC Children’s Services

We have the following questions for Esther Crawley.

In your CV it states that you published research showing “children with CFS/ME don’t go to school because they are unwell not anxious”. However, isn’t it true that you believe there is a condition termed Pervasive Refusal Syndrome (PRS)?

If the answer to i) is yes then what proof do you have of this, what research is there to prove this really exists?

If the answer to i) is yes then how many children who were diagnosed with ME have you believed to have PRS?

What medical tests do you perform on patients who are suspected of having ME/have ME?

Do you test for acute and/or reactivated infections?

From the minutes of the meeting it appears none of our points were discussed. IiME were informed by CoM [Countess of Mar] that the questions to Esther Crawley were not asked as they were not appropriate to the discussion. The minutes of that meeting are available here

Ends

——————-

Please note that ME agenda is unable to enter into correspondence around the Lightning Process.  Please direct any enquiries regarding the content of the Minutes of Forward-ME meetings to the Chair of Forward-ME.  Please direct any enquiries regarding the content of Invest in ME’s statement to Invest in ME.

Posted in APPG on ME, AYME, AfME, Action for M.E., BRAME, CBT/GET, CFS Clinics, CFS Clinics Inquiry, CFS/ME Collaborative Conference, Child protection, Countess of Mar, Invest in ME, Lightning Process, ME Association, ME Research UK, ME in Parliament, ME in children, MSBP (FII), NHS service provision inquiry, NICE CFS/ME guideline, The Young ME Sufferers Trust | Comments Off

GOSH gives platform to Lightning Process

Posted by meagenda on July 22, 2009

(Correction: An earlier version of this post erroneously associated Ms Anna Gregorowski with the PRIME Project – apologies to Ms Gregorowski for this misattribution. )

GOSH gives platform to Lightning Process

Please note that ME agenda is unable to enter into correspondence around the Lightning Process.

In the previous posting Forward-ME: Minutes of meeting 8 July 2009 Dr Charles Shepherd (ME Association) is reported as having raised concerns in relation to a forthcoming event at University College London in conjunction with Great Ormand Street Hospital (GOSH) at which Phil Parker of the Lightning Process is scheduled to give a presentation.  Also presenting is Prof Peter White (BARTs, co-PI for the PACE Trial). 

See:  Forward-ME: Minutes of meeting 8 July 2009  Minute item 5. Lightning Process

The event to which this item refers is:

University College London in conjunction with Great Ormond Street Hospital

http://www.ich.ucl.ac.uk/education/short_courses/courses/2S-88

From Assessment to Recovery: Holistic Approaches to Working with Young People with CFS/ME

This annual one day event will provide you with skills and knowledge on how to manage Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFSME) when working with children and young people.

The holistic theme is throughout the day from diagnosis to treatment. You will learn about motivational interviewing and have an introduction to the Lightning Process. You will hear from young people accessing support at GOSH and be able to ask them questions.

There will be two interactive workshops: Dietary management and Interdisciplinary skills for treatment. There will be a mini-lecture focussed on Medical management.

Date: 30 September 2009

Why you should attend

The day will provide

- Interdisciplinary assessment and treatment ideas

- opportunity for networking

- interactive workshops

- informative presentations

Who should attend?

Clinicians and health professionals who work with young people and /or have a special interest in CFSME

Programme

Please note that this is a draft programme and is likely to change before the event. Please continue to check the website for updates.

08.45 – 09.15 REGISTRATION & REFRESHMENTS

09.15 – 09.45 Keynote address Ms Anna Gregorowski

09.45 – 10.30 The importance of diagnosis & the power of labeling for patients with chronic, unexplained, disabling fatigue Professor Peter White

10.30 – 11.15 Helping kids get ready, willing & able to make changes: motivational interviewing in chronic illness Dr Deborah Christie

11.15 – 11.30 REFRESHMENTS

11.30 – 12.30 Video diaries Patient/parents

12.30 – 13.00 Outpatient Rehabilitation Programme at GOSH Dr Anna Hutchinson & Monica Samuel

13.00 – 13.45 LUNCH

13.45 – 14.00 Networking options

14.00 – 15.15 Workshops/Mini lectures (each delegate selects 1 workshop/mini lecture to attend)

1. Dietary management of CFS/ME Judith Harding

2. Clinical investigation…to test or not to test Dr Vic Larcher, Dr Jo Begent & Dr Terry Segal

3. Basic skills of treatment & management of CFSME, including relapse prevention Dr Anna Hutchinson & Monica Samuel

15.15 – 15.30 REFRESHMENTS

15.30 – 16.15 Introduction to Lightning Process Phil Parker

16.15 CLOSE

DISCLAIMER

The GOSH Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ME (CFSME) service is committed to sharing expertise & knowledge related to CFSME & young people. We do not endorse or recommend treatment & management other then that recommended by NICE (www.nice.org.uk) & RCPCH guidelines (www.rcpch.ac.uk).

Speakers

Course Directors:

Dr Anna Hutchinson, Senior Clinical Psychologist

Monica Samuel, Senior Physiotherapist

——————–

Please refer to UCL site for meeting registration details

Posted in AYME, CBT, CBT/GET, CFS Clinics, Lightning Process, ME Association, ME events, ME in children, NICE, NICE CFS/ME guideline, PACE Trials, PRIME Project, Professor Peter White | Comments Off

Forward-ME: Minutes of meeting 8 July 2009

Posted by meagenda on July 21, 2009

Would Dr Esther Crawley like to provide evidence to support this statement?

“Dr Crawley explained that the reputation the CFS/ME charities had for infighting was not particularly helpful and prevented research and clinical involvement.”

In February, this year, Dr Crawley, who had been a member of the NICE Guideline Development Group, was awarded £730,000 for research into “CFS/ME” and “Fatigue” in children:

http://www.bristol.ac.uk/ccah/news/2008/12.htmldresthercrawley

 

The Minutes of the last meeting of the Forward-ME group, held on Wednesday 8 July at the House of Lords, have now been posted on the group’s website:

This is a caucus group to the APPG on ME convened by the Countess of Mar, last October. Membership of the group is by invitation only; members of the public are not permitted to attend either as participants or observers.

The 25% ME Group had been a member of Forward-ME but has since withdrawn all involvement with the group. 

—————————-

http://www.forward-me.org.uk/8th%20July%202009.htm

FORWARD-ME

Minutes of the meeting held on Wednesday 8 July 2009 at the House of Lords

1. Present: Christine Harrison – BRAME

Bill and Janice Kent – ReMEmber

Jane Colby – TYMES Trust

Peter Spencer – AfME

Charles Shepherd – MEA

Mary-Jane Willows – AYME

Margaret Mar – Chairman

 

2. Apologies: Tanya Harrison – BRAME

Sue Waddle – MERUK

Kathleen McCall – Invest in ME

 

3. Minutes of the Meeting held on 21 April 2009:

The minutes of the meeting were agreed and signed by the Chairman.

4. Dr Esther Crawley, FRCPCH; PhD, Senior Lecturer at the University of  Bristol and a Consultant Paediatrician, Chair of the CFS/ME Clinical  Research Network Collaborative (CCRNC)

and

Dr Hazel O’Dowd, MSc, D Clin Psych, Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Clinical Champion for CFS/ME services for Avon, Gloucester, Wiltshire and Somerset:

The Chairman introduced Dr Crawley and Dr O’Dowd and thanked them for coming to address the Group.

Dr Crawley gave a PowerPoint presentation a copy of which she kindly agreed to send to us after the meeting (see Presentations )

http://www.forward-me.org.uk/Presentations.htm 

Click the link to open/save the file depending on your browser

CFS/ME Clinical and Research Network and Collaboration by Esther Crawley – PowerPoint Show file

http://www.forward-me.org.uk/Presentations/forwardME_no_photos.pps  (Ed: MS PowerPoint or compatible reader required)

She explained that there were historical issues that had resulted in mistakes being made over patient participation. She had fought for patient/carer involvement and, by the time of the next CCRNC executive there will be 8 patient/carer representatives (4 from charities) on the Executive committee.

The National Outcomes Dataset (NOD) is an essential tool for providing evidence for further research into causation and treatments.

There are many strengths upon which the CCRNC intends to build. Openness and their recognition of the importance of working together has already attracted MRC, NIHR and Welcome support. The list of current research studies currently being carried out by members of the CCRNC was extensive and covered many medical specialisms.

Provision of services was a serious weakness, especially where children were concerned. Most children did not even get a diagnosis; there was no domiciliary provision for them as, indeed, there was not for most adults who are seriously affected. There was, historically, a lack of patient involvement.

Opportunities for progress were opening up with the ability to do large-scale research on cohorts of 3,000 patients. There was no other comparable large scale cohort in the world.

An open approach which looked at both good and bad results was essential if improvements in care, data collection and sharing, and the ability to apply political pressure were to be achieved.

Dr Crawley explained that the reputation the CFS/ME charities had for infighting was not particularly helpful and prevented research and clinical involvement.

The meeting was opened to questions. Janice Kent asked whether the Genome Wide Association Studies were linked to the genetic research conducted by DR Jonathan Kerr. Dr Crawley explained that his work involved gene expression – how the genes function. This generated hypotheses for further investigations. The results could be altered by effects secondary to the illness – by alcohol, drugs or exercise, for example. Genome-wide association studies involved scanning the DNA of a large cohort of patients to find common genetic variations associated with illnesses which would enable researchers to detect, treat and prevent diseases.

Charles Shepherd asked whether, in the light of the widespread opposition to the NICE Guidelines, charities that were opposed to them would be invited to become members or associates of the CCRNC executive. Dr Crawley acknowledged that, whilst the NICE Guidelines were flawed, they were a start. There was a need for all to work together to produce evidence to effect a change in the guidelines. In order to join the collaborative, charities would be expected to sign up to the evidence based approach. It would be a matter for discussion.

Janice Kent asked about charities and groups that had been excluded from formal representations to the specialist clinics when they were being set up. She explained that they had a wealth of information and experience. Dr Crawley said that the CCRNC want to work with everyone concerned and ask Janice to write to her with the detail.

Christine Harrison asked about coverage by the CCRNC. She explained that the east of England had no specialist services at all. Dr Crawley agreed that provision for most areas was thin. The original budget had been for about £100,000 for each clinical team. To be assessed as cost effective, this would treat 100 patients. Some regions were dealing with 300 patients on this budget. There was a very real need for effective local services.

Christine asked about the grading of patient evidence as NICE had given the very large amount of evidence it received the lowest grading. Dr Crawley acknowledged that the method for grading was imperfect. Patient experience was valuable and should inform high quality research, opening the door to further research.

Jane Colby asked about the rationale of treatments offered for different aetiologies of CFS/ME. Dr Crawley explained that with an illness like CFS/ME which is a heterogeneous disorder there were differences between what was observed clinically and what was shown biologically. She cited schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, which were thought to be separate illnesses but are the same on genome wide association studies. There was a need for caution as not enough was known. In her clinics, patients were offered a variety of options which were individualised. If they made a wrong choice another option would be sought. There is currently no evidence of what will work for different subgroups. Jane asked about return to school. Dr Crawley said that she listened to her patients and helped them to achieve what they thought they could do, whether it was to improve their athletic performance, socialising or education, for example.

Peter Spencer commented on several of the points raised including analysis of data, measurements of effectiveness, benchmarking and people wanting to work with and learn from each other. There was a need to concentrate research resources. Greater patient involvement was key. There was no obligation on PCT’s to take the severely affected into account. The severely affected were particularly neglected; they had no voice and it was not surprising that they were particularly frustrated.

Charles Shepherd commented on the fact that those with the greatest need were given the lowest priority. Dr Crawley suggested a solution would be for them to use the NICE Guidelines which state that the severely affected have the right to have an immediate domiciliary visit and access to all services. If there were no specialists in their area they should ask for an out of area referral. These were costly and, if used enough, local services would be provided on cost grounds. It was not good practice to expect severely affected children and adults to travel long distances for consultations or for physicians to travel to make domiciliary visits. The situation was gradually improving, but effective outcomes were still a drop in the ocean compared with the unfulfilled need.

Dr O’Dowd spoke about training, for which she is responsible within the CCRNC. She accepted that it was not perfect. In 2003 she had to establish training for the first wave of teams with national training for the new clinicians. The DoH mandate was to improve diagnosis by GP’s. This was improving very slowly. Initially, when they set up training courses, only a few interested GP’s attended. It was difficult to attract those who were sceptical about CFS/ME. They then attached training to the end of other events that were more attractive to GPs. There were also local GP training schemes happening in a piecemeal way. They wanted to get CFS/ME on the core curriculum for medical, physiotherapy and occupational therapy training. This was difficult, but there were some successes. She acknowledged that there were regional variations. In some places there was a high staff turnover for specialist services. They were developing the workshops. Additionally, over the next 2 years they hoped to develop an on-line training package that would be easily accessible. Working with the CCRNC had been beneficial as the trainers could have access to a large body of training material from the regions which cut down their workload.

Speaking personally, she said that there was much less scepticism about CFS/ME amongst the people she worked with. She had seen a marked change in her day to day dealings with doctors and other health care professionals. She felt that it was essential that the GP, district nurse and other members of the primary care team should always be involved in home visits. The most successful encounters were those that occurred on a one-to-one basis.

Margaret Mar asked how Dr O’Dowd would address the charge of a lack of balance between the psychological and the biomedical models of the illness at the April meeting of the CCRNC. She said that, after her experience of working with patients with other chronic conditions such as cancer and arthritis, she had been surprised to find that this was an issue with CFS/ME. She had not had any personal problems with it – in fact she found that sufferers have broader minds that many with other illnesses, possibly because they had been so neglected and forced to fend for themselves. The April conference had been full of variety, with lots of biology, but she accepted that they did not get it right. There was a problem in that many invited speakers, whose contributions were valuable, would not attend or would not agree to their papers being made public because they were wary of criticism.

Charles Shepherd asked whether the CCRNC had a view about causation, particularly the roll of deconditioning and abnormal illness behaviour. Dr O’Dowd said there was no overall view as there was no defined causation and the processes were not yet understood. This should not stop people being helpful. Patients understood well what affected them and any fitness programmes were developed jointly with the patient. Very few could be described as deconditioned.

Mary-Jane Willows commented that there was ‘no one voice’. If everyone did the same there would be no learning. Models of service were one of the factors in terms of outcomes.

Janice Kent asked about adverse effects from participation in the PACE trial. She described what had happened to a particular patient from her group, she was advised to obtain the patient’s permission and to feed back to the PACE triallists. It was essential that they were aware of bad results as well as good ones. Dr Crawley pointed out that all treatments have some side effects and that it was important to find those that worked for individual patients.

Christine Harrison asked whether CCRNC had a website. She commented on the lack of any services in East Anglia and asked whether they used patients in their training sessions. She also asked whether CFS/ME should be included in neurology training. There was no dedicated CCRNC website. As CFS/ME was bigger than just neurology, it was not thought appropriate to confine it to ‘one box’. The lack of GP services meant no home visits. As a result, there was an unknown number of patients who had fallen off the radar of NHS care. Unfortunately, there were not enough resources to cover every contingency and it was impossible to train GPs who do not want to listen.

Peter Spencer echoed the need for training and commented on the variations in awareness of CFS/ME. *He understood that Dr Miller of Liverpool University had developed a training module on CFS/ME for the Royal College of physicians. The workshops at the April conference had involved professional workshops and good interaction. Assumptions about the agenda for the conference were, unfortunately, based on assumptions about where speakers came from rather than facts based on what they actually said. AfME was associated with PACE and had been pleased by the very low drop-out rates. He agreed that adverse effects should be reported. There was a need to reconcile evidence of NHS providers with patient surveys on outcomes and to question the differences. In so far as GET was concerned, there was a need to look at the detailed evidence with clinicians. For example, he asked whether it was proper GET. Were randomised control trials appropriate for long-term, chronic conditions such as CFS/ME? He agreed that evidence based principles were essential.

Charles Shepherd asked whether there were exclusion criteria as he had a case where a patient had been excluded on grounds of obesity. Dr Crawley said there was no central policy. She screened her patients because there were other causes of fatigue and she had found one child with undiagnosed leukaemia. She could not judge decisions made by other clinicians.

5. **Lightning Process:

Charles Shepherd had been made aware of a meeting which was to take place at University College London in conjunction with Great Ormond Street Hospital which appeared to promote the Lightning Process for patients with CFS/ME. As Dr Crawley knew something about the subject, she was asked to remain and to contribute to the discussion. Of particular concern was the promotion of the programme to vulnerable clinicians who had just started to practice. After some discussion about the pros and cons of the programme, it was agreed that Mary-Jane Willows would talk to the organisers on behalf of Forward-ME highlighting our concerns.

6. APPG Inquiry:

As this had been discussed at the APPG meeting that took place immediately before the Forward-ME meeting, it was agreed that there was not much more to be said, though there were concerns about delays and the incomplete coverage of prospective witnesses with questionnaires.

7. MRC Project:

***Charles Shepherd reported that the latest information was in the MEA magazine and on their website.

8. Any Other Business:

Margaret Mar reported that she had had an interesting meeting with Dr Wendy Ewart, Director of Strategy for the MRC. She was interested to work with us and to meet the CCRNC team.

Following a letter from InvestinME [sic] in which the difficulties of working with charities and groups who were not of the same mind on particular matters, Margaret Mar had written to them asking whether they wished to continue with their membership of Forward-ME. This would be discussed further at the next meeting.

There being no further business, Margaret Mar thanked Dr Crawley and Dr O’Dowd for their very full presentations and for their candid responses to our questions. She hoped that they would both agree to continue to work with Forward-ME.

9 Date of Next Meeting:

To be advised.

——————-

*Dr Alistair Miller was a presenter at the Royal Society of Medicine “Chronic Fatigue Syndrome” Conference on 28 April 2008:

Download Abstracts and Biographies [PDF 86k]
http://www.rsm.ac.uk/chronicfatigue08/abs.pdf

What drugs can I use? [PDF 243k]
Dr Alastair Miller, Royal Liverpool University Hospital

http://www.rsm.ac.uk/chronicfatigue08/moss_miller.pdf

What drugs can I use? Dr Alastair Miller
http://rsm.mediaondemand.net/player.aspx?EventID=1337

**Please note that ME agenda is unable to enter into correspondence around the Lightning Process.  Please direct any enquiries regarding the content of these Minutes to the Chair of Forward-ME.

***Refers to the MRC CFS/ME multi-disciplinary panel chaired by Prof Stephen Holgate.  Although the group has held several meetings, the group’s Terms of Reference have yet to be agreed and published (FOI Act).

Posted in 25% ME Group, APPG on ME, AYME, AfME, Action for M.E., BRAME, CBT/GET, CFS Clinics, CFS Clinics Inquiry, CFS/ME Collaborative Conference, Countess of Mar, Invest in ME, Lightning Process, ME Association, ME in Parliament, ME in children, MRC, NHS service provision inquiry, NICE, NICE CFS/ME guideline, Prof Holgate, Professor Peter White, The Young ME Sufferers Trust | Comments Off

Lynn Gilderdale: Media coverage, 10.12.08

Posted by meagenda on December 10, 2008

Please note that Suzy Chapman, owner of ME agenda site and Read ME UK Events site has no connection or involvement with the Lynn Gilderdale Tribute website.  All enquiries about the Lynn Gilderdale Tribute website or the content of the site should be referred directly to the Lynn Gilderdale Tribute site webmaster.

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Lynn Gilderdale Tribute website

http://lynngilderdale.net/

Please read the Lynn Gilderdale Tribute website Disclaimer at:

http://www.lynngilderdale.net/disclaimer.html

 

freefoto

Check back later for additional links which will appear on this entry underUpdates since this morning”

Overnight, the Telegraph published three additional articles: one an update on the status of the case, the second, a commentary on ME from Dr Max Pemberton and a third in which Elizabeth Grice talks to the family of severe ME sufferer, Emily Collingridge and to Sylvia Penny, mother of severe sufferer, Michelle.

On the Mail site, Esther Ranzten, President to the children and young person’s organisation AYME, who has written many articles in the past about her daughter Emily’s recoveries and is currently ascribing her daughter’s recovery to the Lightning Process, has written a lengthy piece about her daughter with commentary on the death of Lynn Gilderdale.

This morning, the Gilderdale case was featured on ITV which included commentary from Dr Charles Shepherd (a URL for a video clip will be posted here when available).

Yesterday, 9 December the case was reported on Channel 4 (video link below).

Updates since this morning

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Video links courtesy of Tom Kindlon, Irish ME Society

Channel 4 evening news item:

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1529573111

In Tuesday 9th December Part 3 section click ‘play’ and move gauge
along to around the 13:20 area.

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(Channel) 5 News

http://www.fivetvonline.tv/news.php?page=2&news=1370

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BBC 5-Live

around 1.08

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b00ft25d

or

“Drive” Tuesday

http://www.bbc.co.uk/fivelive/programmes/

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BBC

Hope for more ME awareness

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/7775862.stm

includes interviews with Dr Charles Shepherd (ME Association) and Criona Wilson (mother of Sophia) and also with Daily Mail journalist, Gill Swain.

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NHS blog

http://nhsblogdoc.blogspot.com/2008/12/myalgic-encephalomyelitis-chronic.html

[An earlier version of this entry drew attention to an error made by "Dr Crippen" on his blog where he had stated that Dr Charles Shepherd was medical adviser to "The ME Society".  "Dr Crippen" has since posted a clarification.  Dr Charles Shepherd is a medical adviser and a Trustee of the national patient organisation, The ME Association. ]

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The Sun

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article2022473.ece

ME girl Lynn and her mum

By ANTONELLA LAZZERI

10 December 2008

THIS is the first picture of ME victim Lynn Gilderdale with her mum – now suspected of killing her.

Lynn, 31, looks pale and fragile and has a medical tube taped to her cheek as mother Kay tenderly nuzzles up to her.

Last week Lynn was found dead from a suspected morphine overdose after being bedridden for 17 years by “yuppie flu” myalgic encephalomelitis…

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The Argus

http://www.theargus.co.uk/news/3964749.Murder_suspect_mum_speaks_out/

Mum Kay Gilderdale’s support through allegations of Heathfield “mercy killing”

11:12am Wednesday 10th December 2008

By Andy Chiles

A mother suspected of the mercy killing of her ME sufferer daughter spoke yesterday of the “great support” she had received from family, friends and the community.

Kay Gilderdale, 54, was at home in Stonegate, near Heathfield, after being released on bail by Sussex Police.

She was arrested on Thursday on suspicion of the murder of her daughter Lynn Gilderdale, 31, who was found dead that morning.

Det Chf Insp Andy Griffiths, leading the investigation, yesterday refused to confirm Miss Gilderdale had died from an overdose of the painkiller morphine, as had been reported in the national press…

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Wednesday, 10 December

Telegraph

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/3690981/Mother-arrested-over-mercy-killing-could-face-long-wait-for-charges.html

Mother arrested over ‘mercy killing’ faced with long wait

A mother arrested on suspicion of killing her daughter in a ‘mercy-killing’ may have to wait four months to find out if she is charged with murder…

By Caroline Gammell and Murray Wardrop

Last Updated: 9:54PM GMT 09 Dec 2008

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/3692446/Why-ME-remains-a-mystery-to-doctors-and-their-patients.html

Why ME remains a mystery to doctors and their patients

The term Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) entered the International Classification of Diseases in 1969 and described a baffling, medically unexplained cluster of symptoms that includes widespread muscle and joint pain, chronic, severe exhaustion and difficulties with concentration and memory.

By Max Pemberton

Last Updated: 12:46AM GMT 10 Dec 2008

This results in a variably debilitating condition. Most criteria used for diagnosis state that the condition must be present for more than six months and all state that the symptoms must not be the result of other medical conditions. Since the late 1980s the term Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) has gradually replaced ME and the pejorative term ”yuppie flu”. There are numerous theories concerning the underlying cause…

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/3692639/I-had-three-years-of-nothingness-of-hell.html

‘I had three years of nothingness, of hell’

As the mother of an ME sufferer is suspected of her ‘mercy killing’ Elizabeth Grice talks to another family blighted by the cruel disease.

By Elizabeth Grice
Last Updated: 12:50AM GMT 10 Dec 2008

This is only the third telephone conversation Emily Collingridge has been strong enough to receive this year.

She can manage to hold the phone but it is painful against her ear and her mental processes are stretched to the limit to sustain a conversation. Either her brain is racing far too fast, or running too slow, she explains. “It is as if there is a huge wall in my head. I am on one side and all my mental skills are on the other. I hope one day I will scrabble up and climb over the wall.”

Losing her cognitive ability is only part of it. Collingridge has been bedridden for three years and ill for as long as she can remember…

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Daily Mail

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1093325/ESTHER-RANTZEN-I-weep-devoted-mother-For-I-watched-daughter-endure-living-death-ME.html

ESTHER RANTZEN: I weep for this devoted mother. For I, too, watched my daughter endure a living death from ME

By Esther Ranzten
Last updated at 12:59 AM on 10th December 2008

Kay Gilderdale has lived for 17 years in a hell I understand only too well. Her daughter Lynn had been suffering from ME in its most severe form – unable to walk, talk, swallow food or hold up her head. Throughout those years, Kay was her child’s devoted and constant carer, providing round-the-clock comfort and support without a trace of self-pity. Now Kay has been arrested, suspected of a mercy killing, after her daughter’s death from a morphine overdose last Thursday.

[Image: Recovery: Emily Wilcox, who suffered from ME, with mother Esther Rantzen]

It is not for me to judge what role she did or didn’t play in Lynn’s final hours. But I do know the heartbreak she must have endured, watching her daughter suffer for so long…

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ITV

Interview with Dr Charles Shepherd

[Link for video to be posted if/when available]

ITV website

http://www.itv.com/Lifestyle/ThisMorning/Health/MyalgicEncephalopathyME123/default.html

This Morning – Myalgic Encephalopathy (M.E)

M.E

Vicky Shepherd, 23 has been battling with Myalgic Encephalopathy (M.E) for over half her life.

Vicky believes the illness was triggered from when she had Glandular Fever when she was 11, but it took five years before Doctors came up with the diagnoses…

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Channel 4

Tuesday 9 December

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1529573111?bclid=4170244001&bctid=4366136001

13.06 mins in from start.

Commentary from Dr Charles Shepherd (ME Association).  Images of 25% ME Group website.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Image Freefoto.com

Posted in 25% ME Group, Gilderdale case, Lightning Process, ME Alliance, ME in the media, ME in videos | Comments Off

Letter to AYME: Your articles on CBT and the lightning process

Posted by meagenda on October 7, 2008

Comments to this posting are now disabled

PERMISSION TO REPOST

Letter to AYME sent 23rd September 2008

Your articles on CBT and the lightning process by Lawrence Alexander

Dear AYME

After many years of reading – and obtaining a good deal of encouragement from your magazine, I feel now I have no choice but to cancel my membership. This is a very sad decision to make, but I now feel that the original premise of AYME has been clouded by a more worrying agenda.

You may print sections of this e-mail if you wish.

Over the last couple of years I have noticed more and more articles in high praise of the various “new” psychological techniques that claim (admittedly, often through testimony and personal stories) to  have had considerable benefit. At first this didn’t bother me too much: there are a huge variety of interventions out there that are supposed to help M.E sufferers, including acupuncture, aromatherapy, meditation etc, so I assumed by including the graded-exercise type measures you were simply reflecting that.

What worries me now is how one sided your stance has become. The “psychological camp” (including Wessley, Marcovitch et al) has always  been, and will continue to be, a great threat to ME sufferers though their views that either the sufferer is faking or exaggerating their illness, or that they have the wrong mindset entirely and would get better immediately if they only thought more positively. In the last  issue of your magazine (amongst some other excellent and moving articles in the old spirit of AYME) you devote three whole pages to graded exercise, Cognitive Behaviour Therapy and the “Lightning Process”- which I consider to be the new trade name for the same thing. There are frequent references throughout to the psychological techniques as a complete miracle cure. Apparently, as soon as you tell yourself you no longer have ME and start thinking more positively about life, you’re cured- tah dah! I think this is at best overoptimistic and at worst highly irresponsible.

I have been though a course of graded exercise/CBT myself and encountered the many, many professionals who follow it. Their approach in my case was basically this: emotional policing. No  thoughts other than sugar-coated joy were permissible; I was not to think about my own symptoms again, I was to join a local college and begin a course straightaway, and all my problems, bodily and  financial, were to magically “resolve themselves”. Luckily, in my case, in addition to the ME I have now been diagnosed with a heart condition which is probably contributing to a large amount of my  fatigue. I say “luckily” because doctors are no longer bullying me into doing things I can’t do. How many other ME sufferers have undiagnosed problems such as this? How would they know if they’re  being ignored? How many know how crucial low blood pressure is to the illness and the simple, practical ways to alleviate it?

I now see very little practical medical advice in your pages but an enormous amount of the psychological with very little critical questioning of the latter.

These mind techniques need far more scientific research into them before they can be marketed to your readership – some of whom are as young as eight or nine – as a complete miracle cure. If the  treatments fail they could result in, at best, severe disappointment or at worst severe relapse from being told you can think yourself out of your entirely physical medical condition.

In 2004 my parents made a big effort in fundraising for your charity with a concert held here in Ludlow with youth choir Stream of Sound. Sadly at the time I wasn’t well enough to attend but it was a great success and about £700 was raised.

I have been ill for eight years. At my worst I was bedbound practically 24 hours a day. I am now on the upward curve and have a far better quality of life than I did even two years ago. I couldn’t have wanted anything more than to have been cured throughout those terrible years but there was literally nothing I could do! I always find it extremely insulting to have people brush off M.E as being merely the result of negative thinking. If I was a terminal whiner I could understand it but I have always been of the Oscar Wilde persuasion- “we are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at  the stars”. And that, I think, is the only cognitive behaviour therapy I will ever need.

Yours Sincerely,

Lawrence Alexander, aged 22

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Statement by Lawrence Alexander, 2006:

http://johnhemming.blogspot.com/2006/11/times-articles-and-southall-victim.html

Scroll down to: The following statement will be going to the GMC on Monday.STATEMENT BY LAWRENCE ALEXANDER to GMC Fitness to Practise Directorate:

Lawrence Alexander’s statement “in the best interests of the child”, 2007

http://davidsouthallexposed.blogspot.com/search/label/Lawrence%20Alexander%27s%20statement

Media coverage from the BBC, 2007

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7108910.stm

Posted in AYME, CBT, CBT/GET, Lightning Process, ME in children, ME in the media, Simon Wessely, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Response from editor, You and Yours: ME: 30 July 2007

Posted by meagenda on August 3, 2007

Today’s edition of Radio 4’s You and Yours featured a brief follow up to Monday’s broadcast about ME – an item which had been billed as “ME latest knowledge” and itself, a follow up to the programme “Leo, Rusty and ME” [Friday, 27 July]. The production team had received a large response to Monday’s programme with complaints that too much time had been given over to Lightning Process. A couple of emails were read out – one claiming Lightning Process as a “cure”, another critical of therapies, the basis for which no underlying science could be provided.  A return to the subject of ME (no details given) is being planned by You and Yours for the Autumn.

Following the Your and Yours broadcast on Monday, I raised the following points by telephone and email with the production team:

1] At the start of today’s You and Yours strand on ME, presenter Peter White introduced the illness as “Myalgic encephalitis” (which is Phil Parker’s preferred term) and not as “Myalgic encephalomyelitis” which is the term more commonly used and the term under which ME is indexed in WHO ICD-10: G93.3. Why did You and Yours researchers elect not to use the term “Myalgic encephalomyelitis”?

 

2] Professor Findley referred to a pilot study into the “Lightning Process” but omitted to mention that he is currently undertaking a clinical study into the Lightning Process with colleague, Gerri de Vries, the LP practitioner and occupational therapist who also contributed to the programme. Professor Findley and Ms de Vries’ professional interest and personal involvement in this LP pilot study should have been disclosed.

 

3] This follow up item to Friday’s broadcast “Leo, Rusty and ME” was listed as “ME latest knowledge”. Why was no-one invited onto the programme to talk specifically about biomedical research into ME and recent UK and international developments or explore the controversy over the dearth of MRC funded biomedical research into this illness? This was disappointing coverage; rather than present a balanced overview of “latest knowledge” this follow up came across as little more than a promotion for NLP and Lightning Therapy – with Ms de Vries even getting in a plug for Phil Parker’s new book.

The following response has been received, today, from You and Yours editor, Andrew Smith:

I did acknowledge on today’s programme that Monday’s discussion was unsatisfactory. I thought we did a good job in exploring the Lightning Process – which has received a fair degree of media attention in recent months and I think that focus was justified. However in dealing with the wider issues of the various treatments for the condition we palpably failed – though only due to lack of airtime. We will be returning to the subject of ME in the autumn and one of our producers may contact you during the research process. I hope you will feel that you want to help.

 

On your first point regarding the term we used for ME. I did ask a few minutes before transmission that we use the full title for the condition. This was inevitably hastily researched by someone who hadn’t worked on researching the original item and who didn’t realise the existence of more than one full term for ME. While we didn’t use the more commonly used term, what we broadcast was not incorrect and I think unliklely to mislead a lay audience in any material way.

 

On your second point, we are satisfied that Professor Findley is an objective authority on all aspects of ME. If you have evidence to the contrary we will investigate. As I understand it the research he is undertaking on the LP attracts no extra funding and is not an endorsement of LP but simply illustrates a curiosity about it. He works on various approaches to treating ME. Gerri de Vries was cast as an advocate of LP, we made this clear to listeners and they were in a position to judge accordingly.

 

Andrew Smith
Editor
You and Yours
BBC Radio 4

Posted in Lightning Process, ME in the media, Professor Findley | Leave a Comment »