| 
				 
				
				 
				In March 2003 
				the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology 
				produced its Report “The Work of The Medical Research Council” 
				(HC 132) in which MPs issued a damning judgment on the Medical 
				Research Council (MRC), 
				lambasting it for wasting funds and for introducing misguided 
				strategies for its research.    
				
				
				The Select Committee had received 
				seven representations about the MRC’s refusal to heed the 
				biomedical evidence about ME/CFS. MPs found evidence of poor 
				planning and of focusing on “politically-driven” projects that 
				have diverted money away from top-quality proposals.  
				  
				
				
				The 
				unprecedented attack was the result of a detailed probe into the 
				workings of the MRC. In particular, MPs questioned why the MRC 
				was content to support policies and projects that are likely to 
				perpetuate such criticism. 
				
				  
				
				Given that 
				biomedical research, including gene research (which has shown 
				that in people with ME/CFS, there are more gene abnormalities 
				present than are found in cancer sufferers) has demonstrated 
				that the psychiatrists who hold such sway at the MRC are 
				comprehensively wrong about ME/CFS, nowhere could such criticism 
				be more apposite than in relation to the PACE Trial. 
				
				Patients with 
				ME/CFS and their families are in despair, because no-one in 
				authority in the UK seems to be listening: as Mike O’Brien MP, 
				Minister of State for Health, made plain at the APPGME meeting 
				on 2nd December 2009, Ministers can no longer tell 
				agencies of State what to do. This apparently means that, no 
				matter what conclusions are arrived at or what recommendations 
				are made or what evidence is put before a Minister, the Minister 
				concerned can deny having any power to implement change. The 
				Minister himself is reported to have said that he could not 
				require the MRC to undertake research in any specific field, nor 
				could he require Primary Care Trusts to follow Ministerial 
				command.  As far as ME/CFS is concerned, it seems that there is 
				nothing the Government can  -- or will – do about the current 
				situation. 
				
				It is apparent 
				that the Government feels no duty of care towards those whose 
				life has been devastated by ME/CFS, a situation that is borne 
				out by Professor Stephen Holgate’s confirmation at the Royal 
				Society of Medicine Meeting on 11th July 2009 
				(Medicine and me; hearing the patients’ voice) that the 
				Government will not permit integrated research into ME/CFS. 
				
				This can only 
				mean that the influence of the Wessely School over the lives of 
				people with ME/CFS will continue and that their tactics of 
				denial will remain unchallenged, no matter what the calibre of 
				the biomedical evidence showing them to be wrong. As people 
				recently drily commented on an ME group, those tactics include: 
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“load up your 
				committees with your biased friends and pretend they are 
				offering a fresh look; give really negative scorings to 
				biomedical applications; try to stop biomedical papers getting 
				published in the better known journals; make sure to keep on 
				publishing psychiatric rubbish to bias the general medical 
				population and scientific community against any other 
				explanation, and give the impression that CBT/GET is all that is 
				needed i.e. no need to waste all that money on silly biomedical 
				projects” 
							
							 (LocalME@yahoogroups.com  
				6th December 2009)  | 
						 
					 
				 
				
					
					
					 and  
				 
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“ensure you use 
				the sketchiest diagnostic criteria you can get away with; wherevere possible, avoid seeing / talking to patients at all; 
				never discuss / involve the severely affected; avoid using 
				objective outcome measures; rotate the name of lead authors on 
				papers and ensure you include plenty of reference papers from 
				your psychosocial mates….”  
				  
							
							(LocalME@yahoogroups.com  
				7th December 2009).  | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				As others have 
				noted, the strategy is  
				(1) to ignore ME; 
				 (2) to ensure that CFS 
				is seen as a problem of false perception, then  (3) to reclassify 
				“CFS/ME” as a somatoform disorder (Co-Cure NOT:ACT: 12th 
				January 2008), which is far removed from the reality of ME/CFS, 
				the CNS dysfunctions of which are described by Dr Byron Hyde as  
				being caused by “widespread, measurable, diffuse 
				micro-vasculitis affecting normal cell operation and 
				maintenance….The evidence would suggest that ME is caused 
				primarily by a diverse group of viral infections that have 
				neurotropic characteristics and that appear to exert their 
				influence primarily on the CNS arterial bed” (ibid). 
				
				Patients and 
				their families, many clinicians and researchers are well aware 
				of such strategies and tactics but  -- so powerfully has the 
				Wessely School myth about ME/CFS been promulgated -- have been 
				unable to halt them. 
				
				As Dr Jacob 
				Teitelbaum reported, the XMRV virus study clearly documents that 
				(ME)CFS is validated within the mainstream medical community as 
				a real, physical and devastating illness,  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“again proving that 
				those who abuse patients by implying that the disease is all in 
				their mind are being cruel and unscientific…Though the economics 
				may cause a few insurance companies to continue to unethically 
				deny the science, so they can avoid paying for the health care 
				and disability costs they are responsible for, this research 
				should speed up understanding of the illness.  Meanwhile, for 
				those with the illness, their families and their physicians, it 
				is now clear that this is a real and devastating illness” 
				
							 
							
							(Co-Cure RES: 4th December 2009).  | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				
				There can be no 
				doubt that, for patients with ME/CFS as distinct from those 
				suffering from chronic “fatigue”, neither CBT nor GET is 
				effective, otherwise everyone would by now be cured. 
				
				How, for 
				instance, does the Wessely School’s “CBT model of CFS” accord 
				with the fact that in the South African epidemic, all the rats 
				that were injected with the urine of ME patients died, but not a 
				single rat died that was injected with the urine of controls?  
				The Wessely School’s answer is likely to be that “epidemic ME” 
				is not the same as present day “CFS/ME”, an explanation that 
				does not withstand scrutiny, given that the only symptoms of 
				“CFS/ME” on which the Wessely School focus are those that are 
				known to occur in mental disorders (tiredness, anxiety, 
				depression and mood disorders, the latter being a consequence, 
				not a cause, of ME/CFS), whilst ignoring, dismissing or wrongly 
				attributing symptoms such as vertigo, post-exertional 
				physiological exhaustion, intractable pain, neuromuscular 
				in-coordination and dysautonomia to “hypervigilance” to “normal 
				bodily sensations”, a  situation best described as 
				iatrogenic abuse. 
				
				As clinical 
				psychologist Carl Graham recently pointed out, the type of CBT  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“used 
				in psychoneuroimmunological interventions is not limited to 
				changing ‘irrational beliefs’ “, noting: “The 
				view that all those involved with CBT based treatments accept 
				the idea that irrational thinking had led to a somatoform 
				disorder in a patient who has a chronic disease is entirely 
				unfortunate”  
							 
							
							(Co-Cure NOT 14th December 
							2009)    | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				and in an update (Co-Cure 15th December 2009) 
				the same psychologist referred to  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							 “the association of CBT 
				with the very unfortunate tendency of some in the treatment 
				field to claim ME/CFS is a somatoform or psychiatric disorder”, 
				concluding that he was  “not advocating for CBT based 
				practices for chronic health problems to continue where they are 
				being done poorly or as a monotherapy”.  | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				To change what 
				they regard as “irrational beliefs” of people with 
				“CFS/ME is, however, the expressed intention of the PACE Trial 
				Investigators, who continue to promote CBT/GET as a monotherapy 
				for “CFS/ME”, a matter of concern to experts such as Dr David 
				Bell from the US, who on 12th December 2009 was 
				quoted in The Daily News online (http://bit.ly/4KofDR): 
				“‘The tiredness linked to (ME)CFS is caused by a reduction of 
				blood flow to the brain’  Bell said.  The doctor said the blood 
				flow in people with severe cases of (ME)CFS can be as low as 
				people with terminal heart disease”.  Would people with 
				terminal heart disease be required to undergo psychotherapy to 
				convince them they are not in fact sick, but only believe 
				that they are sick? 
				
				The apparent 
				intention of the PACE Trial Principal Investigators to remove 
				people with ME/CFS from receipt of state and insurance benefits 
				raises a larger question than just welfare reform.  It is also 
				about the way illness is being redefined and reclassified and 
				about why this is happening and about what forces are at work in 
				this process of redefinition. 
				
				As recently 
				noted by Overton (Psychological Medicine 2010:40:172-173; online 
				08.10.09), in Sharpe et al’s 2009 study (Neurology out-patients 
				with symptoms unexplained by disease: illness beliefs and 
				financial benefits predict one-year outcome), one of the authors 
				(Stone) accepts that terms such as ‘functional weakness’ may 
				well need to be re-worded as ‘conversion disorder’ on official 
				documents.  Challenging Sharpe’s assertion that their data lend  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“support to the idea that interventions which change these 
				variables [ie. state benefits or opposition to physician-imposed 
				psychological explanations of physical symptoms] may improve the 
				outcome for this patient group”, Overton points out that 
				Sharpe et al inadvertently infer that patients with “symptoms 
				unexplained by disease” are guilty of benefit fraud and 
				Overton states that it is erroneous for Sharpe to use data in 
				the way he does to assert that “Illness beliefs and financial 
				benefits are more useful in predicting poor outcome than the 
				number of symptoms, disability and distress”. | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				Moreover, 
				Sharpe’s assertion contrasts with the evidence of Rosata & 
				Reilly who, unlike Sharpe, correlate the level of benefit with 
				the degree of disability (Health & Social Care in the Community 
				2006:14:294-301). 
				
				In their 
				Editorial in the Journal of Psychosomatic Research (Is there a 
				better term than ‘Medically unexplained symptoms?’ 2010:68:5-8, 
				Epub ahead of print), two of the MRC PACE Trial Principal 
				Investigators, Professors Sharpe and White, clearly state their 
				intention to claim medically unexplained symptoms (MUS -- in 
				which they include ME/CFS) as psychosomatic disorders by stating 
				that the term “functional somatic disorder” fulfils most 
				of their own criteria for re-branding somatoform disorders 
				(those categories being “bodily distress or stress syndrome”, 
				“psychosomatic or psychophysical disorder”, and “functional 
				syndrome or disorder”). Sharpe and White et al continue:  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“All 
				too often, these patients receive one-sided, mostly purely 
				biomedical…treatments….Although some existing treatment 
				facilities include both biomedical and psychological 
				therapies…they are not appropriate for …the majority of patients 
				with the type of symptoms with which we are concerned here.
				Therefore, some specific treatment facilities have been 
				developed (eg. Chronic Fatigue Clinics in the UK)….The 
				terms…’psychosomatic’ or ‘psychophysical’ are helpful in 
				providing a positive explanation of the symptoms…Alternatively, 
				the term ‘functional somatic syndrome’ allows explanations…in 
				terms of altered brain functioning…demonstrating that the 
				symptoms are ‘real’ and yet changeable by alteration in thinking 
				and behaviour as well as by a psychotropic drug”. | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				There could be 
				no clearer confirmation that the UK “CFS” Clinics allegedly for 
				patients with ME/CFS that were set up under the guidance of 
				Professor Anthony Pinching were and remain intended to change 
				patients’ thinking and behaviour, which vindicates the countless 
				patients whose damaging experiences and legitimate concerns have 
				been collated by Research into ME 
				(RiME NHS Clinics Folder  --
				
				www.erythos.com/RiME ). 
				
				 
				As noted by 
				Horace Reid (http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/Wessely-axis.htm 
				), seventeen years after the 1992 CIBA Symposium on CFS, members 
				of the Wessely axis are still promoting their agenda identified 
				in the secret MRC document in which that Symposium was 
				summarised (http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/The-MRC-secret-files-on-ME.htm). 
				
				 
				For example, in 
				a 2008 paper comparing “chronic fatigue” in Brazil and Britain, 
				Cho and Wessely et al could not have been more explicit:  
				
					
						
							| 
							 
							“British 
				patients were more likely to be a member of a self-help group 
				and to have had sick leave / sickness benefit because of CFS, 
				variables claimed to predict poor outcome…The greater public 
				and medical sanctioning of CFS/ME and the more favourable 
				economic climate in the UK may lead to greater access to sick 
				leave / benefits for patients with chronic fatigue….There is 
				also evidence of an association between the so-called ‘secondary 
				gain’ and health outcomes….Therefore, the higher availability of 
				sick leave / sickness benefit because of CFS in the UK may both 
				contribute to and reflect the greater ‘legitimisation’ of 
				chronic fatigue as a medical disorder” (Physical or 
				psychological? A comparative study of causal attribution for 
				chronic fatigue in Brazilian and British primary care patients.  
				Acta Psychiatr Scand 2008:1-8). | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				 
				Reid noted how the article 
				reflected the MRC-funded PACE Trial of CBT and GET as set out in 
				the Trial Protocol that was published in BMC Neurology 
				(2007:7:6):  
				
					
						
							| 
							 
							“Predictors of outcome: Predictors of a negative 
				response to treatment found in previous studies 
				include…membership of a self-help group, being in receipt of a 
				disability pension, focusing on physical symptoms and pervasive 
				inactivity” (3,18,19). | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				There is no 
				mention in that paper of on-going viral infection but, perhaps 
				expediently, in a paper that came out about the same time as the 
				XMRV news broke, Wessely quietly inserts his own new model that 
				allows for infection as a perpetuating factor, so the Wessely 
				School goal-posts may be subtly shifting:  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“…a model of the 
				aetiology of CFS can be constructed from a combination of 
				pre-morbid risk, followed by an acute event leading to fatigue, 
				and then a pattern of behavioural and biological responses 
				contributing to a prolonged severe fatigue syndrome.  Based on 
				this model, the initial cause of the fatigue has a limited 
				impact on the eventual course of the illness….However, there 
				is emerging evidence which suggests that it may be appropriate 
				to extend it to encompass fatigue with an apparent medical 
				cause….it may be that the divide between fatigue secondary to 
				diagnosed medical problems and CFS may need to be made more 
				permeable” (Chronic fatigue syndrome: identifying zebras 
				among the horses. Samuel B Harvey and Simon Wessely. BMC 
				Medicine 2009:7:58). | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				This is very 
				different from the PACE Trial concept of “CFS/ME” which, in over 
				2,000 pages of information obtained under the Freedom of 
				Information Act, including all the Manuals, does not allow for 
				any on-going pathology. 
				
				Because ME/CFS 
				is a targeted disorder for the withdrawal of state benefits, the 
				situation for ME/CFS patients in the UK is increasingly dire, 
				with severely affected patients being harassed by the Department 
				for Work and Pensions requiring a 60-page booklet to be 
				completed because the DWP menacingly informs such patients: 
				 
				“We have reason to believe that you are capable of work”. 
				
				An article 
				entitled “Mistaken Illness Beliefs…” by David Lees published in 
				the ME Association’s magazine “ME Essential” (Winter 2009: 
				34-35) admirably captures the situation: 
				
					
						
							| 
				
				“…a friend with 
				ME…was told, despite the persistence of her symptoms, that the 
				only thing preventing her full recovery was her ‘mistaken 
				illness beliefs’….’But doctor, I still have nausea / muscle pain 
				/ severe weakness / headaches / exhaustion etc’ can all be met 
				with ‘It’s just your illness beliefs.  There’s nothing else 
				wrong, and if you still experience symptoms, it’s because you 
				haven’t got your beliefs right yet.  As soon as you do, you’ll 
				be well’….It’s impregnably self-immunised (referring 
				to Sir Karl Popper’s ‘self-immunisation’ theory which showed 
				that such theories are scientifically worthless because they 
				have no real explanatory or predictive power) and therefore 
				scientifically worthless as a diagnosis……(Referring to 
				researchers who are struggling to uncover complex mechanisms and 
				to answer difficult and involved questions, Lees continues): 
				 
				Uncertainty and humility are appropriate attributes in these 
				circumstances and they seem noticeably lacking in much of the 
				psychological approach to diagnosis and treatment of ME…..Doctors 
				are presented with difficult, confused, uncertain data and 
				interpretation can be very difficult; but surely this is an 
				argument for more caution and admissions of uncertainty rather 
				than a reason to make scientifically dubious statements with 
				Olympian self-certainty…In the absence of proper research 
				evidence, to work from the assumption that the illness is not 
				primarily organic in origin and must therefore be primarily 
				psychological is unscientific…We should surely have moved on 
				from filling gaps in our medical knowledge with assertions…the 
				least we should expect from medical practitioners in the NHS, 
				whose diagnosis profoundly affects the lives of those with ME, 
				is that their methods and conclusions should be scientific.  The 
				diagnosis of ‘mistaken illness beliefs’ is not – it is itself 
				merely a statement of belief”. | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				Given the 
				significant opposition to the PACE Trial from many quarters, 
				including both patients and professionals and also including the 
				ME Association (the oldest ME charity) and, it is understood, 
				from many patient members of the charity Action for ME (though 
				not the charity’s Trustees, who support the PACE Trial, which 
				seems to indicate that AfME is not a patient-led organisation), 
				there are compelling grounds for suggesting that the PACE Trial 
				should never have been granted approval or funding. 
				
				
				The ME Association has been adamant that the PACE and FINE 
				trials should be halted and on 22nd May 2004 posted 
				the following on its website (which was printed in its magazine 
				“ME Essential” in July 2004): 
				
				
				
				“The MEA calls for an immediate stop to the PACE and FINE 
				trials 
				
				
				 “A number of criticisms concerning the overall value of the PACE 
				trial and the way in which it is going to be carried out have 
				been made by the ME/CFS community. The ME Association believes 
				that many of these criticisms are valid. We believe that the 
				money being allocated to the PACE trial is a scandalous way of 
				prioritising the very limited research funding that the MRC have 
				decided to make available for ME/CFS, especially when no 
				money whatsoever has so far been awarded for research into the 
				underlying physical cause of the illness.  We therefore 
				believe that work on this trial should be brought to an 
				immediate close and that the money should be held in reserve for 
				research that is likely to be of real benefit to people with 
				ME/CFS. We share the concerns being expressed relating to 
				informed consent, particularly in relation to patients who are 
				selected to take part in graded exercise therapy. The Chief 
				Medical Officer’s Report (section 4.4.2.1) noted that 50% of 
				ME/CFS patients reported that graded exercise therapy had made 
				their condition worse, and we therefore believe that anyone 
				volunteering to undertake graded exercise therapy must be made 
				aware of these findings”. 
				
				
				The ME Association notice additionally called for all further 
				work on the FINE trial to be halted, saying the MEA “is not 
				convinced by the evidence so far put forward in support of this 
				approach”. 
				
				It is recorded 
				in documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act that 
				the Principal Investigators and the various Ethics Committees 
				were fully aware of the strength of the opposition to the PACE 
				Trial but that these were dismissed by Professors Sharpe and 
				White: Minutes of the Joint Trial Steering Committee and Data 
				Monitoring and Ethics Committee meeting held on 27th 
				September 2004 record that Professor Paul Dieppe (Chair of the 
				Data Monitoring and Ethics Committee) expressed:   
				
					
						
							| 
				
							“anxiety that recruitment might be impeded by the 
							anti-PACE/FINE lobbyists.  Professor Sharpe and 
							Professor White stated that lobby groups had not 
							previously affected recruitment in trials of GET, 
							which is the most controversial of the therapies to 
							be tested”. | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				A further 
				example is to be found in the Report of the PACE Trial 
				statistician Dr Tony Johnson (a member of the Trial Management 
				Group, a member of the Trial Steering Committee and the person 
				who will oversee the Clinical Trial Unit that is directed by 
				Professor Wessely) who confirmed in the MRC’s Biostatistical 
				Unit’s Quinquennial Report for 2002 – 2006 that the MRC was 
				funding the PACE and FINE Trial “despite active campaigns to 
				halt them”.  A notable point is that his Report was 
				co-authored by Professors Peter White, Trudie Chalder and 
				Michael Sharpe, so all of them were aware of the strength of 
				opposition to the PACE Trial. 
				
				It is also a 
				matter of record that Principal Investigator Professor Michael 
				Sharpe confirmed: “The MRC is currently funding the PACE 
				trial….However, the trial has faced serious antagonism from 
				some, but not all, patient groups, mainly because of concerns 
				about the use of ‘psychological treatment’ for a condition that 
				is seen by many as a medical disorder”  (Report on MRC 
				Neuroethics Workshop, 6th January 2005: Section 2: 
				Altering the brain). 
				
				It is certainly 
				the case that even the MRC’s own Neuroethics Committee expressed 
				doubts over the use of CBT: 
				
					
						
							| 
							 “…CBT aims to influence how a 
				person thinks or behaves…Although psychotherapies are usually 
				thought of as psychological therapies, there is increasing 
				evidence that they can alter brain function.  Further 
				research is needed to …determine whether therapies are 
				reversible or if there are persistent adverse effects.  
				There is already evidence that in certain situations 
				psychotherapy can do harm…There is also increasing public 
				concern that psychological therapies could be used for 
				brainwashing….How much information should patients be given 
				about the possible effects of therapy on their brain?….CBT 
				techniques are now being used more widely to treat somatic 
				conditions…How appropriate is this use of psychological therapy? | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				
				In an article in the New York Times that was published before 
				the PACE Trial began (27th August 2002:  
				
					
						
							| 
							
							“Behaviour: 
				Like Drugs, Talk Therapy Can Change Brain Chemistry”), Richard 
				Friedman MD –- a psychiatrist who directs the Psychopharmacology 
				Clinic at the New York Weill Cornell Medical Centre – stated “Psychotherapy 
				alone has been largely ineffective for diseases where there is 
				strong evidence of structural, as well as functional, brain 
				abnormalities.  It seems that if the brain is severely 
				disordered, then talk therapy cannot alter it”. | 
						 
					 
				 
				
				
				As there are structural brain abnormalities documented in the 
				ME/CFS literature since at least 1992, one of which being the 
				significant loss of grey matter in the brain with irreversible 
				loss of grey cells, especially in Brodmann’s area 9, (which may 
				indicate major trauma to the brain), then the chance of 
				cognitive behavioural therapy being effective in ME/CFS is 
				probably zero. 
				
				
				
				Indeed, it was reported by Professor Leonard Jason at the Reno 
				Conference 
				(March 2009) that one group of patients did not benefit from 
				cognitive behavioural interventions: this was the subset whose 
				laboratory investigations showed they had increased immune 
				dysfunction and low cortisol levels. 
				
				As the data 
				discussed by Friedman was known about in 2002 (the same year 
				that the UK CMO’s Working Group Report was published), then it 
				must be asked why this knowledge has been disregarded by the 
				Wessely School psychiatric lobby. 
				
				
				Given what is already known about the inherent dangers of 
				CBT/GET for those with ME/CFS (especially the known effects of 
				graded exercise as an inducer of oxidative stress and the 
				effects of incremental aerobic exercise on the cardiovascular 
				problems known from the early part of the twentieth century to 
				be an integral feature of authentic ME/CFS), on what ethical 
				grounds can those already crushed by such a heavy illness burden 
				as that imposed by ME/CFS be subjected --- despite denials, in 
				some cases by apparent deceit and coercion – to a management 
				regime that seems to have no hope of beneficial results? 
				
				
				This raises once again the disturbing question: in whose best 
				interests is the MRC PACE Trial being undertaken? 
				
				
				At the MRC Workshop on CFS/ME held on 19th / 20th 
				November 2009 at Heythrop Park, Oxfordshire, in his introduction 
				Professor Stephen Holgate effectively said that the reason for 
				the meeting was the need to move forward, to get away from 
				old models and to use proper science, and that there was no 
				reason not to change things, a view he had also expressed 
				at the RSM meeting “Medicine and me” on 11th July 
				2009. 
				
				
				The question is -- will the results of the MRC PACE Trial and 
				the vested interests of the Wessely School ever permit the 
				getting away from “old models”? 
				
				
				The science is there, the evidence is there, but the political 
				will still seems not to be there, and until the 
				Government can no longer credibly refuse to permit such change, 
				Holgate’s hopes are unlikely to materialise in the UK. 
			 |