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ON THE MORBID FASCINATION WITH PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY
by
Alan Gurwitt, M.D., USA
Every so often there is an upsurge of debate about the place of
psychological problems in regards to CFS, FM, and ME. As a
psychiatrist who has been seeing patients with these illnesses since
1986, as well as following the literature closely, I have often been
embarrassed by and angry at many of my colleagues who fall in line
with self-declared "experts" who see somatization everywhere. Ever
since the mid-1980's there have been "researchers", with an uncanny
knack at cornering research funds because of their already-formed
biases that are in synch with the biases of the funding government
organizations, who declare CFS, FM, ME to have a psychological basis
or, more recently and insidiously, avoiding specificity about
etiology, indicate that CBT and graded exercise will do the
therapeutic job, thus in part implying a major psychological causative
factor.
I have noticed the following deficits in their work, their thinking,
their word choices-or should I say-choice of terms, and their research
methods:
1. They often fail to clearly distinguish between "chronic fatigue"
and "chronic fatigue syndrome". The former is a common symptom in
medical clinics that does have a high linkage to already-present
psychological problems. The latter, as we know, is a fairly specific
medical condition with an unfortunate name. Their sloppiness has led
to all kinds of trouble and misunderstanding.
2. They fail to distinguish between pre-illness psychological
functioning and post-onset occurrence of psychiatric symptoms which
are both organic and understandably reactive in origin. This error
would disappear if they did thorough psychiatric evaluations which
included a careful review of past history and current functioning,
i.e., where they really got to know their patients. Even medical
students are taught how to do this. Their failure to do proper
in-depth psychiatric evaluations in at least some of their studies is
a serious error with drastic implications.
3. Their studies make use of flawed, inappropriate, and superficial
tests of psychological state which then lead to flawed, inappropriate,
and superficial conclusions. Leonard Jason has discussed this problem
in detail. Their use of large numbers of study subjects and
sophisticated statistics give the impression that they are really
scientific; in my view it is pseudo-science.
4. They often fail to include, or to be unaware of, the mounting
medical-neurological-immunological evidence demonstrating the medical
nature of CFS/FM/ME.
5. They demonstrate instead a morbid preoccupation with psychiatric
morbidity. There are moderate and sometimes severe psychiatric
conditions following onset which as physicians and psychiatrists we
need to be aware of, but there is no definitive and convincing
evidence that I am aware of indicating psychological causation.
With thanks to
Co-Cure
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