Dr William Reeves, head of CDC CFS Research Program to take up new position

Dr William C Reeves, head of the CDC CFS Research Program to take up new position

Shortlink: http://wp.me/p5foE-2Hx

Facebook  |  29 January 2010

Change of leadership announced for CDC’s CFS Research Program

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has announced that Dr. William C. Reeves, head of the agency’s CFS Research Program, will be taking a new position within the agency effective Feb. 14, 2010 and that he will no longer lead the agency’s CFS research. Dr. Elizabeth Unger will serve as acting chief of the Chronic Viral Diseases Branch, the unit within CDC that houses the CFS Research Program. On Feb. 14, Dr. Reeves will begin an assignment as Senior Advisor for Mental Health Surveillance in the Public Health Surveillance Program Office within the CDC’s Office of Surveillance, Epidemiology, and Laboratory Services.

The CFIDS Association of America, other organizations and advocates have vocally supported new program leadership to effect a more robust research effort at CDC. This staffing change has the potential to significantly advance CFS research beyond the agency’s intramural program and to seize scientific momentum generated by recent discoveries. We are fully dedicated to making rapid progress in this new era of collaboration and discovery in CFS research.

K. Kimberly McCleary
President & CEO
The CFIDS Association of America

Comment from Mary Schweitzer via Co-Cure mailing list

I have never met Elizabeth Unger, and until her appoinment as the new head of the CDC’s program on CFS, I was familiar with her name only in relation to the CDC’s genome project on CFS.

However, I think it worth pointing out that Dr. Elizabeth Unger has mainly worked as a virologist, specializing in HPV (Human Papilloma virus).

The HPV program has been one of the few real success stories at CDC since AIDS. A generation ago, nobody knew about this virus – but once it was discovered, followed by the realization of its role in causing uterine and other cancers, the CDC did a very good job getting information out to young women. Ultimately, the goal was to develop a vaccine.

The distribution of the HPV vaccine has been controversial, but that should not concern us.

I think it will be great to have a virologist who has experience working with a disease about which little is known heading the CDC’s program. I am looking forward to seeing what Dr. Unger can accomplish.

Mary Schweitzer

As reported by Kelly, via Co-Cure mailing list

Bio of Dr. Elizabeth R. Unger

Like Dr. Suzanne Vernon now with the CFIDS Association, Dr. Elizabeth (Beth) R. Unger PhD, MD was originally doing research for the CDC in Human Papillomavirus Program which was under Dr. William C. Reeves.

A native of Pennsylvania, Dr. Elizabeth R. Unger received her bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Lebanon Valley College (Annville, PA). She received her doctorate in experimental pathology and medical degree from The University of Chicago. After completing her residency in anatomic pathology at The University of Chicago and The Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Pennsylvania State University, she was certified by the American Board of Pathology in Anatomic Pathology.

She was a post-doctoral research fellow of the American Cancer Society and The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust in the pathology department of The M.S. Hershey Medical Center and joined the faculty of the Emory University School of Medicine as an academic surgical pathologist in 1990. While there she was involved in several studies associating EBV with various cancers.

She accepted a position at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 1994 and became the Team Leader of the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Program in the Viral Exanthems and Herpesvirus Branch of the Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases.

Dr. Unger’s research interests have been in molecular diagnostics, viral oncogenesis and molecular epidemiology and she pioneered colorimetric in situ hybridization methods for detection of HPV in diagnostic samples. The HPV program utilizes a multidisciplinary team to conduct laboratory-based epidemiologic research to inform control strategies to reduce the incidence of new HPV infections as well as the major HPV-associated chronic diseases such as cervical cancer and recurrent respiratory papillomatosis. They worked with the National Cancer Institute’s Early Detection Research Network to discover and validate novel molecular markers to improve cervical cancer screening.

In 2000, she first appeared as an author on a CFS study. Chronic fatigue syndrome is not associated with expression of endogenous retroviral p15E. Gelman IH, Unger ER, Mawle AC, Nisenbaum R, Reeves WC.Mol Diagn. 2000 Jun;5(2):155-6.

Dr. Unger is a member of the College of American Pathologist’s Committee on Molecular Pathology and a founding member of the Association for Molecular Pathology. She is on the Council of the American Society for Investigative Pathology and The Histochemical Society as well as a principle scientist with the American Society of Microbiology. She has served as an advisor to the FDA and WHO on HPV testing and vaccine issues. She is on the editorial board of four journals including Technology in Cancer Research and Treatment.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1600 Clifton Rd Mail Stop G41, NE
Atlanta, GA 30333.
Div. of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases
E: eru0@cdc.gov

Update at 1 February:

Kelly notes via correction on Co-Cure (31.01.10)

Dr. Unger actually began work at Emory University in 1986 and for 11 years, where she was an assistant, then associate, professor in the department of pathology and laboratory medicine at Emory University. In 1997, she joined the CDC’s staff as section chief, molecular pathology laboratory in the Viral Exanthems and Herpesvirus Branch within the National Center for Infectious Diseases.

Thread here on Cort Johnson’s Bulletin Boards:
Dr. Reeves Removed from the CDC’s CFS Research Program

Also write-up here:
Dr. Reeves Removed from the CDC’s CFS Research Program

All Party Parliamentary Group meeting on M.E.: some thought

What part of the word “independent” do Dr Des Turner, MP (Chair, APPG on ME) and

Dr Charles Shepherd (Trustee and Medical Adviser to the ME Association) not understand?

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From GBCOne [4.21]

Added 8 October 2008

Comments can be left at:

All Party Parliamentary Group meeting on M.E. – some thoughts

Ciaran Farrell gives his views on a meeting at the House of Commons about Myalgic Encephalomyelitis. Shot opposite the HoC an hour after the meeting ended.

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A video report in response to the meeting of the All Party Parliamentary Group on ME which took place on Wednesday 8 October in Committee Room 18, House of Commons.

Click here for Agenda for October meeting and Minutes for the previous meeting

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

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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

Two letters in the print edition of the Times, 16 September

Two Letters to the Editor (page 27) have been published, today, in the Times print edition and also online here in response to Hilary Patten’s letter published, last week (10 Sept). 

Hilary’s letter can be read here on ME agenda or on The Times site here

Under the heading “Fatigue syndrome funding and therapy” the first response is from Anne Faulkner, Director of The CFS Research Foundation, the other, as anticipated, a response from Barts – from Professor Peter White and Dr Maurice Murphy. 

There is a comment facility on The Times site and the email address for Letters to the Editor is letters@thetimes.co.uk

Hilary Patten’s letter was published again in the “In Gear” section of The Sunday Times, on Sunday 14 Sept, on the general letters page (page 33) under the heading “Chronic fatigue”.

Professor Peter White was a member of the Planning Committee and one of the speakers at the RSM’s London “CFS” conference in April, this year, and is also a speaker at the RSM’s regional “CFS” conference in Bristol, this Thursday.  Click here for a round up of Prof White’s views on ME.

The Times, Letters to the Editor, 16 September 2008

Fatigue syndrome funding and therapy

[ The online version includes a sub heading "More funding is needed for CFS/ME research" ]

Sir, We can assure Hilary Patten (letter, Sept 10) that biomedical research into chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS)/ME is taking place in the UK, funded by the CFS Research Foundation.

This small body is funding research into the genetic basis of the disease. A team at St George’s, University of London, have found that 88 genes in patients with the illness behave abnormally, while they remain normal in healthy people. These genes can be divided into seven subtypes, which interestingly show distinct clinical features.

However, this distressing illness needs well-planned studies and major funding to discover the causes, and then to find therapies and a cure. Some 240,000 people suffer from CFS/ME. Twenty-five per cent of them are housebound or bedbound; 25,000 children are sufferers and it is thought to be the greatest cause of absenteeism in schools.

It is difficult to understand how government departments can ignore the need for biomedical research to enable so many people to return to normal life. The CFS Research Foundation has shown the possibilities of discovering the basis of the disease, but it is up to the Government to take this forward and put an end to so much suffering.

Anne Faulkner
Director, CFS Research Foundation

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Sir, While we have sympathy for Ms Patten’s plight, research shows that a significant minority of people with CFS/ME can recover with treatment, and the majority improve.

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence guidelines, published last year, were based on the largest ever systematic review of the management of the illness, and recommended rehabilitative treatments, such as cognitive behaviour therapy, and graded exercise therapy as safe and effective.

Although CFS/ME can be triggered by some infections, there is no reliable evidence of persistent infection, and the heart and cardiac function are normal, apart from the effects of deconditioning. To the best of our knowledge, no patient has ever died directly as a result of CFS/ME and follow-up studies show no increased risk of dying.

Yes, more research is needed to understand the illness, but both access to currently available treatments and realistic hope for recovery are equally important.

Professor Peter White
Dr Maurice Murphy
St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London

Two UK regional “CFS” conferences in September and October

Two UK regional “Chronic Fatigue Syndrome” conferences in September and October

There are two UK regional conferences on “Chronic Fatigue Syndrome” for medical professionals, students and allied health professionals only, being held by The Royal Society of Medicine (RSM), Wessex Region and The Royal College of Psychiatrists, South West Division Training (RCPsych SWDT) in September and October. 

Note that Dr Esther Crawley, who is presenting at both conferences, was a member of the NICE Guideline Development Group. Mary-Jane Willows, listed as a “Person with CFS/ME” is the CEO of the children and young person’s organisation, AYME. Professor Tony Pinching is a medical advisor to Action for ME (AfME). Professor Peter Denton White will again be speaking on “What is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and what is ME?”. 

The ME Association published a summary of Professor White’s April presentation for the RSM which you can read here http://meagenda.wordpress.com/2008/05/15/mea-summary-of-prof-peter-d whites-rsm-presentation/

Webcasts of the presentation, together with those of the nine other London RSM conference speakers can be viewed at: http://rsm.mediaondemand.net/events.aspx 

The PDF Registration and Agenda form for the RSM’s controversial “CFS” Conference which took place in London, in April, had very usefully included the names of the members of its Planning Committee. It revealed that the planning group had comprised Dr John Scadding (Dean, RSM, Planning Committee Chair) and Miss Bina Arpino (RSM Events admin) and that the rest of the Planning Committee had been made up exclusively of psychiatrists: Professor Peter White, Professor Simon Wessley and his colleagues, Professors Kam Bhui and Matthew Hotopf. The names of Planning Committee members for this Thursday’s Bristol conference have not been given.

1] Royal Society of Medicine Wessex Region – Bristol

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Conference

A one day regional conference organised by The Royal Society of Medicine Wessex
Region

Date: Thursday, 18 September 2008
Venue: UBHT Education Centre, Upper Mauldin Street Bristol BS2 8AE

A PDF of the Registration and Agenda form does not appear to be available from the RSM’s website but a copy can be found here and in the previous posting:

http://www.rheumatology.org.uk/education/event/rpcf1

For Registration information and Agenda see also:

http://www.rsm.ac.uk/academ/cfsbristol.php

“Chronic fatigue syndrome is a common and debilitating illness which can persist for years. Despite extensive research, the nature and pathogenesis of the condition remains enigmatic. There is continuing uncertainty and controversy concerning the physical and psychological components that may contribute to the initiation and perpetuation of the symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome.

“The guidelines published by NICE in August 2007 have met with a mixed response, but many have welcomed the development of evidence based advice about different treatment options.

“The aim of this meeting is to take a broad look at chronic fatigue syndrome, examining its nature and definition, pathophysiology, epidemiology, clinical assessment and diagnosis, the patient perspective, and various approaches to treatment. This is a scientific conference and there will be an emphasis on an evidence based approach throughout.

“Those attending the meeting will gain understanding of the various aspects of CFS being discussed, and be better able to help people suffering from this disabling condition.”

Accreditation: CPD: 5 credits

Agenda

9.30 am
Registration and Coffee

9.55 am
Welcome Address

Prof Mick Leary, Regional Sub Dean Royal Society of Medicine, Wessex

Session One
Chair: Prof Mick Leary, Regional Sub Dean Royal Society of Medicine, Wessex

10.00 am
What is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and what is ME?

Prof Peter White, Centre for Psychiatry, Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, London

10.30 am
What we know about the genetics of CFS/ME

Dr Nicholas Timson, Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol

11.00 am
Differential diagnosis of CFS/ME

Prof Damien Longson, Department of Psychiatry, North Manchester General Hospital

11.30 am
Discussion

11.40 am
Coffee

Session Two

Chair: Dr Esther Crawley, Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases, Bath

12.10 pm
What it feels like to have CFS/ME

Mary-Jane Willows, Person with CFS/ME

12.40 pm
Cognitive behaviour therapy for behaviour change in medical conditions

Dr Hazel O’Dowd, Team Leader CFS/ME Services, Frenchay Hospital, Bristol

1.10 pm
Discussion

1.20 pm
Lunch

Session Three

Chair: Dr Tim Chambers, Bristol Royal Children’s Hospital

2.20 pm
The NICE guidelines

[No speaker name given]

2.50 pm
The practical management of CFS/ME

Dr Esther Crawley, Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases, Bath

3.20 pm
Medication for symptom control. And beyond?

Prof Tony Pinching, Associate Dean for Cornwall & Professor of Clinical Immunology

3.50 pm
Questions and Discussion

4.20 pm
Close of Meeting

Contact: Joyce Achampong, RSM, 1 Wimpole Street, London W1G 0AE, UK
Fax: (+44) (0) 20 7290 2989 Tel: (+44) (0) 20 7290 2980
Email: joyce.achampong@rsm.ac.uk

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2] Royal College of Psychiatrists South West Division Training SWDT

Conference on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in Children and Young People

Date: Friday, 24th October 2008
Venue: St Cuthbert’s Conference Centre, Buckfastleigh, Devon

PDF of RCPysch conference flyer
http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/Leaflet-CFS-final%20-%20web.pdf

Make SWDT part of your personal development plan

Meeting management, teaching and personal development needs for psychiatrists and other disciplines by providing top quality courses for consultants, retired consultants, staff grade doctors and associate specialists, specialist registrars, nurses, etc.

Objectives

. To enable psychiatrists and paediatricians to recognise and treat both the physical and mental symptoms of this illness

. To recognise the role that psychiatrists, paediatricians and GPs have in the treatment of sufferers

. To provide an opportunity for paediatricians and psychiatrists to explore both physical and mental aspects of this syndrome

. Explore the rights of children within medico legal boundaries

5 CPD Hours
This event is considered suitable for CPD subject to the agreement of the individuals peer group South West Division Training

Agenda

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in Children and Young People

“Because Chronic Fatigue Syndrome can affect both the physical and mental health of children and young people this conference brings together paediatric and psychiatric doctors to explore both aspects of this illness.

“Our speakers have a great deal of experience in this area and the case studies they will present will aid indepth discussions.

“This conference is for Psychiatrists, Paediatricians, GPs and other disciplines working with patients with this syndrome”

The agenda for the day will be as follows:

9:00 Registration

9:30 ‘Chronic Fatigue Syndrome – Everything you need to know’
Dr Esther Crawley
Senior Clinical Lecturer Centre for Child and Adolescent Health
University of Bristol

10:15 The Role of the Psychiatrist’
Dr Sebastian Kraemer
Honorary Consultant, Tavistock Clinic, London and
Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist
Whittington Hospital NHS Trust, London

11:00 Coffee

11:30 ‘The pitfalls of clinical practice in CFS/ME’
Dr Bryony Hooper
Medicolegal Adviser
Medical Protection Society

12:15 ‘Development of services/role of the paediatrician’
Dr Gareth Roberts
Consultant Paediatrician in Child Health
North Bristol Health Trust

13:00 Lunch followed by an open meeting

14:30 Case presentations

15:30 Tea

16:00 Plenary with panel of speakers

16.30 Close

Contact:

Pat McPhee
South West Division Manager
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Coombe Lodge
Blagdon
North Somerset BS40 7RG
Tel: 01761 463979
Fax: 01761 463978
Email: pmcphee@southwestdiv.rcpsych.ac.uk

25% ME Group response: Redditch Standard

http://www.redditchstandard.co.uk/comment55884.html

Suicide of ME mum – lesson to be learnt
11 September 2008

THE SUICIDE of Nicola McNougher, a mum with ME, is heartbreaking. Nicola, like many sufferers of ME, found the pain and illness unbearable and claimed she was living “an inhuman existence”.

In the 25 per cent ME group we understand this only too well, as we represent the severely ill ME patients who are totally bedridden, some of whom are tube-fed and dependent on carers, and others who are lucky enough to be able to leave home in a wheelchair occasionally.

Despite the devastating symptoms, ME patients are given cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and told that nothing is really wrong with them, adding a burden of untold frustration and injustice to the hardship of physical disability.

Nicola’s death should arouse some guilt in the psychiatric profession, who, despite overwhelming evidence of immunological, neurological, endocrine, cardiac and gene expression involvement in the illness, insist that ME is a psychiatric condition and advise doctors to treat patients accordingly.

Lack of knowledge from the medical profession and lack of understanding from a society which has been told for years that ME is merely fatigue can make an unbearable situation truly intolerable.

The little-mentioned death toll from ME is not only from suicides, I can personally attest to this as two members of the 25 per cent ME group have died recently with ME on their death certificates.

ME sufferers need biomedical research and treatment, not merely counselling, if more deaths are to be avoided.

Hayley Klinger
25% ME group

www.25megroup.org
21 Church Street
Troon
Ayrshire
KA10 6HT

Bromsgrove Standard: Coverage of inquest of Mrs Nicola McNougher

Two articles, yesterday, from the Bromsgrove Standard, the first covering the inquest of Mrs Nicola McNougher, who died in Switzerland, in May; the second from the Worcestershire ME Support Group.

http://www.bromsgrovestandard.co.uk/news55279.html

The Bromsgrove Standard
4 September 2008
Lucy Thomson

Illness causes mum to take her life

“A Barnt Green woman travelled to Switzerland to end her own life using the assisted suicide method which is legal over there, an inquest heard.

Nicola Caroline McNougher, 43, was diagnosed with Myalgic Encephalopathy (ME) after suffering a number of other debilitating illnesses which caused her severe and chronic pain, said Worcestershire Coroner Geraint Williams…”

Read full article here

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http://www.bromsgrovestandard.co.uk/news55282.html

The Bromsgrove Standard
4 September 2008
Tristan Harris


Calls for more investment into ME

“The chairman of the Worcestershire ME Support Group Ian Logan has called for more funding for research into the debilitating illness. It comes just days after the inquest into the death of Bromsgrove ME sufferer Nicola McNougher who travelled to Switzerland to take her own life, using the country’s legal ‘assisted suicide’ system, after the condition got too much for her…”

Read full article here

Round up of links for Prof Peter Denton White’s views on ME and “CFS”

Round up of links for Prof Peter Denton White’s views on ME and “CFS”

Thank you for your comments, Dr Enlander.

( See: http://meagenda.wordpress.com/2008/08/18/more-zombiefication-of-mecfs-margaret-williams/#comments )

 

Extract taken from conference speakers Abstracts and Biographies document published by the Royal Society of Medicine for their conference on “CFS”, which took place on 28 April 2008:

“Peter White is Professor of Psychological Medicine at Bart’s and the London School of Medicine. His clinical work is as a liaison psychiatrist to Bart’s hospital, and he also jointly leads a clinic for patients with CFS/ME, which he helped to establish in 1984. His research interests include the nosology, causes and treatments of CFS/ME, particularly establishing the aetiological role of viral infections, such as Epstein-Barr virus, and the utility of graded exercise therapy as a treatment. He is currently the lead co-principal investigator of the MRC funded PACE trial, which is a multi-centre trial that compares four different rehabilitation approaches for 600 patients with CFS/ME.”

 

As regards psychiatrist Professor Peter White, there are many of us who consider that he represents as much a part of the problem as psychiatrist, Professor Simon Wessely.  We can only hope that the Baltimore Conference will have served to inform Professor White and will help moderate his views about the illness and its treatment – though I’m not holding my breath.

For an overview of Professor White’s views on ME and “CFS”, readers may like to check out the following links:

For the transcript of the BBC Radio 4 strand on ME, broadcast on 5 November 2007, in which Professor White took part go to:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/youandyours/transcripts_2007_45_mon_03.shtml

For a commentary by Margaret Williams following Professor White’s participation in the discussions on this Your and Yours ME strand go to:

Whiter than white? Margaret Williams, 6 November 2007

http://meagenda.wordpress.com/2007/11/06/whiter-than-white-margaret-williams-6-november-2007/

Professor White published a rebuttal to the Margaret Williams commentary via the Co-Cure mailing list.  You can read Professor White’s response here:

http://meagenda.wordpress.com/2007/11/07/regarding-whiter-than-white-response-from-prof-peter-denton-white/

Professor Peter White was one of the speakers at the controversial Royal Society of Medicine Conference which took place on 28 April 2008.  Professor White will also be a speaker at the regional RSM “CFS” conference to be held in Bristol, in September.

You can view the webcast of Professor White’s controversial RSM “CFS” Conference presentation here:

What is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome & what is ME?: Professor Peter White, Barts & the London School of Medicine

http://rsm.mediaondemand.net/events.aspx

http://rsm.mediaondemand.net/player.aspx?EventID=1291

and view the PowerPoint slides which accompanied his presentation here:

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

The ME Association published a summary of Prof Peter Denton White’s RSM presentation which can be read in full, here:

http://meagenda.wordpress.com/2008/05/15/mea-summary-of-prof-peter-d-whites-rsm-presentation/

 

Also  controversial were the responses submitted by Barts as part of the NICE CFS/ME Guideline Consultation Process.  You can read all the stakeholder responses, including those from Barts, here, on the NICE website (though this will entail ploughing through a large number of documents).

http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/index.jsp?action=folder&r=true&o=36179

In September 2007, Tom Kindlon compiled and published a selection of the responses that Barts had made in the NICE Guideline Consultation Process and these were published here, on ME agenda.  But I’m republishing them, below:

 

http://meagenda.wordpress.com/2007/09/06/a-selection-of-points-the-barts-cf-service-made-during-the-nice-guidelines-for-cfs-me-tom-kindlon/

MEagenda note: Professor Peter Denton White of Barts CF Service co-authored the NICE CFS/ME Guideline Editorial in the BMJ, published Friday, 31 August 2007.

A Selection of the points the Barts CF Service made during the NICE Guidelines for CFS/ME

by Tom Kindlon [originally circulated via Co-Cure mailing list]

I previously highlighted some points made by the Association of British Neurologists during the NICE process [Ed: Read Tom Kindlon's previous article here] and highlighted that one can read further submissions at:

NICE document: Chronic fatigue syndrome / Myalgic encephalomyelitis: stakeholders comments and GDG responses:

However this is a huge mass of information and going back and comparing it to the original is a lot of work. So I imagine most people will not do it.

So I thought I’d highlight some comments by St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services. I have done this on a couple of UK lists and people have been fascinated by what was said. St Bartholomew’s Hospital is often shortened to Barts – this is not a derogatory abbreviation.

The Barts service is led by the psychiatrist, Prof. Peter White. Peter White is a major person in the CFS world. He has done much work in the US in recent years including with the CDC so I thought people around the world might be interested in some of the points they made.

I have not put comments so people can judge the comments themselves.

Tom Kindlon
03 September 2007

Extracts from Comments and Responses to NICE CFS/ME draft guideline from St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services

(i) On Disability aids and equipment:

[TK: A blue badge is a disabled parking badge to allow somebody park in a disabled parking space]

Draft text:
6.3.6.8 For adults and children with moderate or severe symptoms, provision of equipment and adaptations (for example, a wheelchair, blue badge or stairlift) to allow individuals to improve their independence and quality of life should be considered, if appropriate and as part of an overall management plan.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 69 FULL 183 6.3.6.8
“…equipment and adaptations (for example, a wheelchair, blue badge or stairlift)…”We disagree with this recommendation. Why should someone who is only moderately disabled require any such equipment? Where is the warning about dependence being encouraged and expectation of recovery being damaged by the message that is given in this intervention? We are in no doubt that it is a powerful message for a therapist of any sort to provide such aids. Our view is that such aids should only be considered by a multi-disciplinary therapeutic team as a whole, and usually in the context of providing a temporary means for a patient to increase their activity levels. An example would be providing a wheelchair for a bed-bound patient as part of their active rehabilitation programme. In our opinion, such aids should never be seen as a permanent solution to disability in this illness.

NICE response:
We have recommended such equipment only if appropriate, and as part of an overall management plan and as an aid to independence.

Draft text:
1.3.1.8 For adults and children with moderate or severe symptoms, provision of equipment and adaptations (for example, a wheelchair, blue badge or stairlift) to allow individuals to improve their independence and quality of life should be considered, if appropriate and as part of an overall management plan.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services
Equipment and aids may hinder recovery as much as help it, and their prescription needs to consider both outcomes. We believe disability aids can help a patient towards recovery if their use encourages a widening and increase in their own activities, on a temporary basis, as a means of supporting a rehabilitation programme. They should rarely if ever be used for patients with only moderate disabilities.

(ii) On making information available on audio tape:

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 91 FULL 260 13
Why should anyone with concentration difficulties find it easier to use audiovisual technology, which by your implication does not involve reading, more than reading itself (from either a book or computer screen)? Would it not be more effective to negotiate a simple graded programme of reading to help such a patient improve their reading ability, along with helping to improve their cognitive capacity through improving sleep and mood? What might be effective advice is to encourage the use of voice-activated software in someone who finds typing using a keyboard physical tiring, and needs to meet a deadline in their job or studies.

NICE response:
Noted and removed – we consider that the text on including cognitive activities addresses these points.

(iii) On Weight loss in CFS/ME

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 88 FULL 248 6.5.5.2

“Adults or children who experience severe weight loss should be referred to a dietitian for assessment, advice and nutritional support, which in extreme cases may include tube feeding.”

This is alarming and arguably negligent advice, which we strongly condemn. Any patient who experiences severe weight loss should be referred for appropriate assessment, not by a dietician alone, but by an appropriate specialist doctor (gastro-enterologist or psychiatrist) so a diagnosis can be made. We do not know of any reliable or replicated evidence that severe weight loss, indeed any weight loss at all, is a part of CFS/ME. Whereas we are aware of patients referred to our service with a diagnostic label of CFS/ME who on assessment have an alternative diagnosis, most commonly anorexia nervosa (sometimes presenting atypically without a body image disorder, which is well described in the anorexia nervosa literature), but, on occasion, malabsorption.

NICE response:
This recommendation has been removed.

(iv) On Neuropathetic pain and Gabapentin:

Draft Text:
Gabapentin: The GDG noted that the wider survey was supportive of gabapentin in severe CFS/ME sufferers. The GDG was uncertain why this was the case. Because of its side effects, the GDG did not think that it should be used for mild pain but there will be certain individual cases when it might be considered despite a relatively high side-effect profile. The GDG decided not to make a positive or negative recommendation.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 87 FULL 233 1The GDG noted the survey support of the use of gabapentin in CFS/ME. However this drug is licensed for neuropathic pain. There is no evidence that patients with CFS/ME have a neuropathy and we would not recommend the use of this drug, particularly as one of its significant side effects is sedation, without empirical evidence for its support, which is currently lacking. It would be surprising if NICE gave guidance based on anecdotal evidence, an inaccurate indication, for a drug, which has significant adverse effects.

NICE Response:
Noted and we have recommended that people should be referred for specialist pain management if appropriate.

(v) Bowel symptoms and CFS/ME:

Draft text:
6.4.5.5 Prescribing of gut anti-spasmodics (such as mebeverine, alverine, and peppermint oil) should be considered for adults and children with bowel symptoms, such as cramp or bloating.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 85 FULL 229 6.4.5.5
“…gut anti-spasmodics…” are not treatments of CFS/ME since bowel symptoms are not part of CFS/ME. You should make it explicit that this treatment might be indicated for the treatment of IBS, if present comorbidly. Alternatively, and perhaps more wisely, you could suggest that IBS, if present, should be treated in the light of the best available evidence, and refer readers to appropriate guidance, which may or may not include considering antispasmodics as the treatment of choice for “bloating”, although we would doubt it. You do mention IBS on page 233, line 12.

NICE response:
We have revised this recommendation and referred to the NICE IBS guideline – currently in development.

(vi) On Drug Intolerance and CFS/ME:

Draft text:
6.4.5.2 Adults and children with CFS/ME may experience greater intolerance and more severe adverse/side effects from drug treatment. Where appropriate, drug treatment used for symptom control should therefore be initiated at a lower dose than in usual clinical practice, and should be increased gradually.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic FatigueServices 84 FULL 229 6.4.5.2
We are not aware of any reliable and replicated evidence to support the statement that patients with CFS/ME are more intolerant or have more severe adverse effects; and “more intolerant” than whom? We do not agree that drug treatment should be initiated at lower dose than in usual clinical practice. This possible myth is repeated within the guideline at various points, and is important since it may make doctors more likely to prescribe sub-therapeutic doses. If you are going to keep this included, you should make sure that the anecdotal level of evidence for this is explicitly stated. We would suggest changing to “…drug treatment at lower doses may be considered…”

(vii) On Recovery times:

Draft text:
6.3.6.16 When planning a programme of GET the healthcare professional should:
• discuss with the patient ultimate goals with the patient that are important and relevant to them. This may be, for example a 2 x 15 minutes daily brisk walk to the shop, a return to previous active hobby such as cycling or gardening, or, if more severely affected, sitting up in bed to eat a meal.
• recognise that it may take weeks, months, or even years to achieve goals, and it is essential that the therapy structure takes this pace of progress into account.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 75 FULL 188 6.3.6.16
These goals should include recovery, not just exercise and activity goals. If it takes “years” to achieve goals, then either the goals are wrong or the therapy is wrong. What other treatment in medicine would take years to work? We suggest “or even years” is deleted. If a therapy is not helping within a few months, either the therapy or the diagnosis or both should be reviewed and changes considered. We suggest that this advice is pertinent to all treatment approaches, not just for GET.

NICE response:
The statistics indicate that total recovery is relatively rare and the GDG felt that to include recovery as a goal may lead to disappointment. As the goals are patient derived they may be long term. Interim goals would be developed.

(viii) on Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS):

Draft text (this is in a section on severe CFS/ME):
“Family life may also be affected as people with severe CFS/ME are often sensitive to sounds and smell. For example, the person may be unable to tolerate light or cleaning products whilst they are often unable to control their body temperature, thus impacting on the living environment.”

and

“…Those caring for an individual with severe CFS/ME professionally need an understanding of the illness and the needs of the individual to meet the challenges of, for example, cooking or cleaning for an individual who is sensitive to the smell of food or of cleaning materials or bathing an individual who finds touch painful. Therefore proper training should be given about the condition with the involvement of the patient for any particular problems.”

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 92 FULL 261 3 +
A patient with increased sensitivity to the smell of various chemicals may be suffering from multiple chemical sensitivity, but you would be making a dubious assumption to state this is part of or even characteristic of severely disabling CFS/ME. MCS is a potentially remediable condition through a graded exposure programme on the basis that the underlying pathophysiology is a conditioned response. It should not be considered as a part of CFS/ME.

(See: Staudenmayer H, Binkley KE, Leznoff A, Phillips S. Idiopathic environmental intolerance: Part 2: A causation analysis applying Bradford Hill’s criteria to the psychogenic theory. Toxicological Reviews 2003;22:247-61.

Bornschein S, Hausteiner C, Zilker T, Forstl H. Van den Bergh O, Devriese S, Winters W, Veulemans H, Nemery B, Eelen P, Van de Woestijne KP. Acquiring symptoms in response to odors: a learning perspective on multiple chemical sensitivity. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 2001;933:278-90.

Otto T, Giardino ND. Pavlovian conditioning of emotional responses to olfactory and contextual stimuli: a potential model for the development and expression of chemical intolerance. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 2001;933:291-309.)

NICE response:
This section has been removed.

(viii) Point about whether CFS/ME is an incurable chronic disease or not:

Draft text:
1.3.1.6 The objectives of the individualised programme are to:
• sustain or gradually extend, if possible, the person’s physical, emotional and cognitive capacity
• manage the physical and emotional impact of their symptoms.

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services 103 NICE 18 1.3.1.6
The emphasis here would be appropriate for someone suffering from an incurable chronic disease, which CFS/ME is most often not. The aim of an individualised programme should be to help the patient recover, or, if this is not possible, to help the patient improve their quality of life and minimise disability. The expectation of both the patient and the practitioner is vitally important in determining outcome, and these current aims are too conservative, and inconsistent with the best available evidence.

NICE response:
The Guideline Development Group had to balance a positive outlook with the recognition that some people will not recover.

(ix) On liaising with employers:

Draft text:
• Healthcare professionals should be proactive in advising about fitness for work and education, and recommend adjustments or adaptations to work or studies to enable rehabilitation of adults and children with CFS/ME. This includes liasing (with the person’s consent) with employers, education providers and support services e.g: occupational health services

SH St Bartholomew’s Hospital Chronic Fatigue Services FULL 23 22 thru 27
Sometimes acting as an intermediary between patient and employer may encourage dependence rather than fostering recovery via empowerment. We therefore suggest adding the word “may” on line 24 to read, “This may include…”

Two media items: CBT for MUS, GPs fail to spot Hep C

Promotion of CBT and “biopsychosocial (BPS) therapy” for medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) in today’s Independent:

The Independent

All in the mind: the cases that doctors can’t explain

Doctors call them heart-sink cases: the one in four patients whose symptoms have no known cause. So are they really ill? Roger Dobson investigates

Tuesday, 12 August 2008

“And it is not just chronic aches and pains. Sensory loss, walking problems, hallucinations, non-cardiac chest pain, paralysis and seizures are all there, with no apparent cause. Some patients have a history of eight or more unexplained complaints in different parts of their body.”

[...]

“Yet talking therapy, especially cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), can work for many people, and may even save lives. At Ben-Gurion University in Israel, doctors took 42 patients whose symptoms could not be medically explained, and gave half of them normal medical care, while the others had biopsychosocial (BPS) therapy. The latter could include lifestyle changes, relaxation techniques and exercise, psychotherapy, CBT and family therapy.”

Read full article here

and an item on GPs failing to identify and treat Hep C and chronic liver disease on the Sky News:

Sky News

Orla Chennaoui, Sky News reporter

Tuesday, 12 August 2008

“Hundreds of thousands of Britons could be suffering from chronic liver disease because GPs are failing to spot the problem.”

[...]

“A survey published today shows that more than two thirds of doctors do not know how to read hepatitis C test results.”

“That means that as many of 90% of sufferers do not even know they are ill.”

Read full article here

Parents beware: The ONE CLICK Group commentary

In connection with the presentation on Child Protection issues by Jane Colby and Mary Jane Willows at the 2 July APPG, the ONE CLICK Group, yesterday, issued a commentary which can be read here

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are the views and opinions of the ONE CLICK Group and all enquiries in connection with this commentary should be referred to the ONE CLICK Group. The documentary evidence of the incidences referred to in this commentary, which also documents the involvement of the legal advisors to the ONE CLICK Group in relation to the incidences described, are available from the ONE CLICK site. 

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