Category Archives: GPs

WE’RE BACK AGAIN – WITH AN ‘OLYMPIC’ EDITION OF THE 2012 FIBROMYALGIA CONFERENCE & PAMPERING

by Jeanne Hambleton©

The good news is the southeast Fibromyalgia Conference with Pampering will go ahead next April 2012.

I was offered loads of real help and support for the Folly Pogs FM Cause for a Cure research fund (my passion), so I told myself the male members of my family who raised the most objections to more work and more conferences were wrong. I rewrote our rulebook. It now reads we should do it again, and possibly again and even again, as long as the delegates enjoy and support the conference. Backed by the FMS SAS Sussex and Surrey charity trustees who are now involved with the work with Folly Pogs, we have a date to keep next Easter.

THE CONFERENCE
The Fibromyalgia Conference & Pamper Weekend will happen April 6/9 2012 (Easter weekend) at a hotel in Chichester. Our original venue was fully booked for 2012 so we had no choice but to move. We appreciate it is the first Bank Holiday of the year when families get together but why not bring your partner/sister/mother and dad with you. There are loads to see and do in Chichester, Portsmouth and Brighton and you know where the beaches are – Bracklesham Bay and West Wittering.

The venue offers in-house pampering for a fee, with free use of the spa, steam room, great ‘warm’ indoor pool, comfy beds, en suite, TV, tea making, telephone etc. We even have a special vacation offer for couples who want to stay on for an Easter break until the following Friday with a list of tourist attractions to visit.

THE PROGRAMME
We will again offer a full programme of interesting and keynote speakers, workshops and some exercises plus therapies, books and a modest exhibition – all being well. Plans are underway. The weekend – 3 nights 4 days from Friday to Monday will cost £179 per person sharing a double room.

FOR THE ROMANTICS AMONG YOU
We also have a special bridal suite and two bedrooms with four-posters available for the ‘romantics’ among you. We only have the three so payment secures your choice. Sadly there are no single rooms and the hotel requires a £50 single supplement, so bring a friend and share. This time we only have 70 rooms – beds for 150 people – less accommodation than usual – and already more than half these are booked. So hurry and get in touch if you want to come and learn about your condition plus enjoy the fun.

WHAT DOES YOUR MONEY BUY

Your fee (£179) for the weekend pays for accommodation, full board, 3 meals plus tea and coffee breaks, a choice of approximately 12 speakers, 12 workshops, exercises (some of this may be subject to change depending on the availability of those providing the presentations etc.), evening entertainment, some laughs and giggles.

Many delegates who came before are already booked to come back to Chichester. The Fibro Fillies Race Night is back too – horses to name and races to sponsor for research…. and the raffle for research too – prizes always welcome – thanks.

It will be another memorable weekend to make new friends with like minded folk, the chance to speak one to one with our speakers, learn more about your condition, join one of the informal workshops where you can ask questions and relax, and take part in fun competitions – the Easter Bonnet Parade; the Fibro Duck with Appropriate Owner competition (FDAO); and the ‘Olympic’ challenges when we have worked these out. Any ideas? These may be a bit challenging but nothing too hard for a fibromite. One might include knitting squares for a good cause – how quick and how many maybe? Stella Bernardi will highlight knitting as a diversion from pain in one of our workshops.

For more information and a conference booking form email me at jeannehambleton@me.com with CONFERENCE in the subject line please.

A big thanks to Pam Stewart – without her input we might still be floundering and wondering what to do and I would not have a new family rule book. Hooray. Thanks Pam – your heart is in the right place. We all appreciate what you do for the FM community. Also big thanks for the FMS SAS charity and it’s trustees for its help and support.

WHERE WILL THE MONEY GO?
After expenses remaining funds will be donated to the Folly Pogs Fibromyalgia Research Uk (Cause for a Cure). I believe we all need a cure – if only for the next generation as it is hereditary.

Statistic already show 2.7 million folk in the UK have been diagnosed with FM and we believe the same number have our pains which many GPs cannot diagnose due to lack of training in fibromyalgia. It can take two years to get a diagnosis. Stress is our enemy and a prime trigger for fibro flares which may put fibromites in bed for a week. The USA claim fibromyalgia is reaching worldwide epidemic proportions.

For some fibromites coming to conference can be an escape from their four walls, plus depression and isolation which so many fibromites suffer apart from the pains, chronic fatigue, sleep disorder, cognitive behaviour, IBS plus 50 other nasty symptoms. Thanks must go to a number of UK Rotary Clubs who so graciously funded the conference fee and trip for several fibromites on benefits at the last conference. You made a real difference to those gloomy lives. A big thanks to those Rotary Gents on behalf of the FM community.

Hope to see you at conference. Get in touch for a booking form. Take care. Keep well. Jeanne

FM CONFERENCE AND PAMPERS 2011 ANOTHER BIG HIT

By Jeanne Hambleton ©

The Fibromyalgia Conference and Pamper Weekend in April on the south coast was another great success inspite of cancellations by the Americans. Described as a ‘coalition’ conference many Group Leaders played a major part in collecting stage payments at group meetings over several months, to enable delegates to come to conference. Without the support of those Leaders, many living on benefits would have been unable to come. Others found their local Rotary Club willing to help fund their visit to the conference. So many people pulled together to make it happen and during the ‘fond farewell’ it was clear that they all enjoyed themselves.

The conference brought together two major charities, FMA UK and FMS SAS (Surrey and Sussex) to work with FibCon independent conference Folly Pogs team, striving to raise funds for research to find a cure. The success of the event was due to those who supported us and a few dedicated people who desperately want to see a cure for fibromyalgia.

It was another ‘win win’ event for delegates with 14 speakers, 14 work-shops, with many presentations provided by fibromites with a story to tell. There were also exercise programmes and good evening entertainment. Delegates are still talking about the fibro fillies horse racing and racing pigs with knitted woollen jockeys, the Friday highlight. Saturday saw the Cockney Barrow Boys with a sing-along of London songs and a mini re-enactment of an air raid with siren, which brought memories flooding back to some. On Sunday the conference was entertained by a team of four mediums, with humour, bringing messages from loved ones and the return of a favourite comedian who entertained us in 2010 – Paul James.

COMPETITIONS
Some 19 delightful Fibro Ducks were entered for the Best Dressed FD competition with three winners – Debbie Wilson, Maggie Stewart, and Orla Desmond – all winning first place. I am guessing the surnames are right as no one gave their full name. Judges Pam Stewart, Nichola Bond and Simon Stuart found it hard to make a choice. The Fibro Pearly Queen, the first prizewinner, was Maggie Perry, fibromite, who runs a Bed and Breakfast business in Kenilworth in the Midlands. Running a close second were the Pearly Prince and Princess, Ahmed Benallegue and Orla Desmond from Reading, who had also spent hours stitching on Pearlie buttons, to the delight of Cockney Jim, the Pearly King of Camberwell and Bermondsey.

PROGRAMME
Due to the unexpected late cancellation of the American doctors it was difficult to find replacement keynote USA speakers. But UK Dr Kim Lawson, international researcher, from Sheffield University, was among the favourite speakers with two presentations. Dr Nick Avery (CAM) returned and was well received again. Following her success in 2010 Dr Nina Bailey returned and after her presentation spent the day talking to fibromites about their problems. Dr Mark Cropley from Surrey University, a sleep specialist, also visited conference to network, to meet delegates and hear the speakers.

Dr Ian Rubenstein, a GP, had some humourous stories to tell and brought light hearted entertainment to the speakers’ room with his medical and mediumship re collections. Other speakers included Dr Thierry Conrozier, a French consultant rheumatologist; Dr Ruolin Sun, a Chinese herbalist and acupuncturist; nutritionist Joanna Majithia from the Institute of Optimum Nutrition; Mary Jane Burgess, a clinical hypnotherapist from Mind over Matter; Sue-Ellen Nicholls and Nicky Stoddart, pain management consultants; Andy Pothecary, a Special Rheumatology Pharmacist at the Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro; Rebecca Richmond, creator and author of Forget Fibromyalgia; Steve Porter and Heather Gale who spoke about titanium technology and the new healing Black Wand; and Ken Murishwar from Midhurst who told his audience being healthier is simple, with just juice and 5 a day.

In the workshops mainly presented by fibromite, Suzie Oulton told her proto-col story from wheelchair to back to normal and offered tasters of her ’green magic’ which looked suspicious but was quite tasty; Jane Russell the dental hygienist who was a big hit in 2010 was back with more information and dental goody bags; Caroline Hinkes spoke about the Tried and Tested group, HeartMath practitioner and training; Kristina Richardson offered inspired coaching for getting back to work. Kit Stapely gave a talk and laughter workshop, and describing how laughter helped her recover from cancer. Marie-Caroline Scheid-Pickford described her very cold experience at -135o Celsius with cryotherapy (Kriotherapy) at Champneys.

Stella Bernardi, FMS SAS Co-Chair had prepared her work for the power point presentation on Computers for Beginners. But due to a fall she landed in hospital two days before conference and did not make it to conference. Our best wishes for a speedy recovery Stella. Instead Ray Brunton from the Worthing FM SG, an IBM computer buff, stepped in and ran the workshop. A big thanks Ray. With another last minute cancellation due to illness Nichola Bond GL from Worthing FM SG stepped in with ‘How to Start a Group’. Delia Mead with her Family History workshop in the coffee shop was a great success and was busy all morning with her magazines and ‘how to’ brochures.

The exercise workshops were provided by Roz Macarthur who did dance and tone and Pilates, while Chris Milton taught Tai Chi and Qigong mediation and breathing. Anna Moorby, visiting from London introduced the new Healthy Steps – a mixture of dance and exercise introduced as the Lebden system. Sunday saw tables and stands with pamper therapists, mind body and soul readers, art, handicraft and products.

FMA UK and FM SAS both had information stands available throughout the weekend and helped each other and many of the delegates. There was lots of talking to like minded folk, joy, laughter and delight at meeting friends from last year and as well as quite a bit of problem solving. Chairman of the FMA UK Trustees Pam Stewart and SAS Trustee and Worthing GL Nichola Bond and were answering FM questions all weekend – a great opportunity not often available.

THE FUTURE
I am under ‘family orders’ to stand back and give up the conference, but I have heard whispers that the conference is expected to go on possibly in April 2012, so watch this space. As South Downs, the present venue, is already fully booked for 2012, the conference would have to find a new venue. I am told a few folk are hoping to keep the conference going and make this happen again in 2012. Somehow I think I may be disobeying orders, as I cannot believe I will be able to stand back and not share a tip or two.

THANKS
Our thanks to everyone who worked so hard to make the event such a success. Special thanks to Glenda and Martin and their two ‘apprentice film makers’ Sophie and Aruna Murishwar who were volunteered by Dad to do some filming. Only two speakers did not wish to be filmed. What we have we will share with you once the film is available. But please be patient as this may take some time due to health, namely fibromyalgia. Meanwhile work is going ahead on finalising the DVDs from the 2010 conference with Prof. Choy and other key speakers. We are all still reeling from the 2011 conference and pressure of work but as soon as these are available we will let you know.

A sincere and very big thanks to the following folk in no particular order – Heather Butterick, GL Nene Valley who was OC in the speakers’ room and did a grand job of keeping everyone running on time with the help of her dear husband, Roger; Simon Stuart our techno wizard who looked after the equipment in the speakers’ room for the two days of presentations and the race night; thanks to the Wittering Freemasons – Bill, Brian, Stuart, Peter, and wives Pam and Pauline for organising the race night and tote and to Glenda and Martin who helped out on the tote. A big thanks to Lorely who picked and deliver back to the Station, speakers who came by train; Leanne Daniel GL Horndean who took copious notes of the presentations along with Denise Rhodes. Thanks to Jenny Oaks, Pauline (co GL Chichester), Glenna and Arthur who all did long stints on the front desk dealing with enquiries. A big thanks also to those who worked behind the scenes writing letters, Helen and Suzie and my gratitude must go to my family and to my dear friend, Sarah who fished me out of deep water, got me back on dry line and working once again. Without this support we would not be recalling happy moments at the conference.

THE VENUE
Thanks also to all the staff at South Downs who did a grand job – kitchen dining room, entertainments and admin – I personally did not receive one complaint. My bed was comfortable, the food was good even though I was often late and the service was excellent -some said better than a 5 star hotel. From the response on Monday morning I think most of you enjoyed the weekend.

Thanks to everyone who came and supported the conference – without you there would have been no fun, laughter and help for each other. Thanks to those fibromites who gave presentations, did workshops, signed their books. To those who gave their time selflessly to make the event happen, my personal thanks. Also our gratitude to the entertainers, speakers, therapists and Tranquility, who all helped to make the weekend a big success.

FURTHER INFORMATION
The contact details of most folks who entertained were printed in the programme. If you need information and no longer have the programme a short email with FIBCON 2011 INFORMATION in the subject will bring whatever details I have, back to you. Email me at fibrowhat@me.com.

WHERE DID THE MONEY GO?
I wish I knew – the bills seemed to be higher this year – maybe it was petrol costs, rising prices or perhaps we just wanted more this time. Who knows, but our money did not buy as much as it did last year. Apart from Labrha, the French company manufacturing Fibromyalgine, who sponsored the conference bags, there was no other sponsorship. I made at least 12 grant applications all without success – I believe this may be because we are not yet a registered charity and the effects of the current cut backs in the voluntary sector. But we are working hard to get registered. Donations or fund raising for the Folly Pogs research fund are always very welcome.

As before we begged, borrowed and stole short term, to get the show on the road, supported by the Folly Pogs (FM Philanthropists Research Fund). We had a handsome donation from Cherry Cull of Horndean, also a very respectable donation from an anonymous local fibromite. The proceeds of the race night and the raffle will be added to the research fund. I am hoping all those folks and groups who raised money for the Americans’ non-visit will agree these funds should find their way to research to help find a cure. Thanks to Marie-Caroline for her help and support and the £313 sponsorship from her 100-mile walk she has now donated to research.

We will be talking to Dr Kim Lawson, one of our keynote speakers, about research and hope in the future to sponsor some research through him. We do need to raise some mega bucks before then. We already have around 8 would-be trustees willing to help when we become a registered charity – so we live in hopes. All donations gratefully received – we all want a cure – contact me at email address below- and thanks.

2012 CONFERENCE
I said in a weak moment I could not do it again – but guess what – the conference lives on. There will be another April conference and pamper weekend in West Sussex during Easter weekend – Friday to Monday supported by the Folly Pogs and FMS SAS. Details are yet to be arranged but we only have half the accommodation, so it will be first come first booked. To stake your claim write to jeannehambleton@me.com with FibCon 2012 in the subject please.

Meanwhile take care and look after yourselves. Fibro hugs Jeanne

A ‘WIN WIN’ FIBROMYALGIA CONFERENCE

April 23/26 2010 South Downs Holiday Village Bracklesham Bay
By Jeanne Hambleton ©

The first ever fibromyalgia conference with a pamper weekend in the SE of England, Bracklesham Bay, last weekend (April 23/26 2010) kept it promises as a memorable weekend with eminent speakers, workshops, a range of therapies and some great evening entertainment. So successful was the event that a reunion date for the next event was fixed on the spot for another conference in 2011 on April 8/11. With this first event a sell out, bookings will be accepted on first come first booked.

Vistors hit by the delayed flights flew in from Germany, Channel Islands and Ireland at the last minute while some missed the conference stranded in Spain and the Carribbean. Some drove from Scotland, Wales and northern England to the south coast to hear leading speakers in the world of fibromyalgia.

Using all of their energy in an attempt not tomiss anything during the intensive programme during the long weekend, many admitted they expected to go home and go to bed for a few days to recover.

“But it will be worth it. We have learned so much, ” said on fibromite.

Carol from Bristol wrote and said, “I just wanted to send you a huge thank you for a great weekend. I came to the conference with my mum who is a fibromite and I have learnt so much. I never knew how complex this condition was and now appreciate the frustrations people have with a) getting the correct diagnosis at all and b) getting the correct medication. It was reassuring to see and hear for myself that there are alot of dedicated people researching and I have been completely “fired up” to a) raise awareness of this condition and b) do what I can to raise funds for research. I expect you are absolutely shattered but you should be so proud of what you achieved. I cannot thank you enough for the knowledge you have given me and I hope that I can continue to support my mum and other fibromites as a result.”

LOTZA LAUGHS
While there was lots to learn the fibromites had fun too. The Fibro Fillies Race Night had folks shouting for their horse to win and the message that came back means we had to do it again. On Saturday the Folly Pogs ‘posh frocks’ Ball and fancy dress competition with great support from the fibromites saw the Nuns from the Order of Discontent (the Irish lasses) amusing the audience. Sunday evening featured the charity auction with paintings, Elvis’ shirt, a valuable wine collection, a champagne hamper and jewellery and more, all donated by visitors, raising money for research.

Partners enjoyed deep-sea fishing with good catches, played golf, went fossil hunting and some enjoyed the workshops, while the fibromites listened to 12 keynote speakers over two days. The climax on Sunday afternoon was Question Time with 4 doctors on stage.

GREAT NEWS
One of the many ‘best’ things to come out of the Fibromyalgia Conference and Pamper Weekend, under the umbrella of FMA UK, was an announcement from Professor John Davies from Guy’s Hospital and the FM Clinics, who sadly was unable to be with us, and Professor Ernest Choy, Kings College Hospital, who was so well received the delegates want him back next time.

The announcement said, “We are pleased to announce a new NHS Fibromyalgia collaboration under the King’s Health Partners (Guys, Tommy’s and Kings NHS Hospitals). Heading this new initiative is Professor Davies and Professor Choy, who share a common objective of creating an integral clinical and research programme to advance the understanding and management of patients with Fibromyalgia.

Professor John E. Davies is Consultant Rheumatologist at Guy’s and Professor Ernest Choy is Clinical Reader in Rheumatology at KCL and Director of the Kings Musculoskeletal Clinical Trials Unit.”

The delegates received the news with cheers and expressed relief that further progress was being made in the recognition of our invisible disability – fibromyalgia.

A DATE FOR THE DIARY
In view of the enthusiasm of delegates to come back and meet the people they met this time, the 2011 event on April 8/11 2011 will be reunion with all they liked and some new speakers. All fibromites will be welcome to the residential weekend. There will be staged payments to help those on benefits to spread the cost.

Other on site activities included various workshops including Maryse Boulles’s sound therapy, Karen Henderson sharing her Bath Hospital experience following a one month stay; Gemma Kingsman from Consultaid who talked about Finding the Funds for Groups; and hygienist Jane Russell who talked about teeth and health. Sheila Green from Motorvate Chichester talked about a gym with a difference. Giselle and Ian Smith from the DWP spoke about the benefit system. Sunday saw two informal ‘Meet the Doctor’ sessions with Dr. Robert Lister and Dr. Ray Perrin. The weekend included Pilates, Tai chi, Yoga with a free pamper taster day, a shopping experience and fibromites arts and crafts. One to one pamper therapy sessions ran over two days at conference discount.

SPEAKERS PRESENTATION SUMMARIES

Most people had come to hear the specialists in the field of fibromyalgia. Everyone claimed they learned so much. Even the doctors found the experience rewarding with feedback from the fibromites worthwhile.

One fibromite said it was a ‘win win weekend’ with everyone getting a great benefit.

The following brief summaries of the hour long presentations are reported by fibromites who attended the conference and helped to provide information for this article. My grateful thanks to the following note takers as it was impossible for me to sit in and listen to any of the speakers due to other conference commitments. I just wish I had been a guest….

Group Leader of West York’s FM SG Denise Rhodes made the following comment.

“Overall, the information from the speakers was delivered with humour, sympathy and great authority. The passion with which much of the subject matter was disseminated demonstrated a level of caring far and above what I expected and definitely above the experience level of many of the GPs and consultants reported to me on the helpline and by colleagues in my group. All speakers made themselves available after their presentations and showed great interest in questions asked and gave detailed responses,” she said.

Report by Leanne Daniels from Horndean FM SG with thanks for her commitment and help during the weekend.

Professor Ernest Choy MD, FRCP is Consultant Rheumatologist at King’s College Hospital and Director of the Sir Alfred Baring Jarrod Clinical Trials Unit in the Academic Department of Rheumatology, King’s College London. He is also Director of Research and Development at King’s College Hospital in London.

Discussing the new advances in the pathophysiological management of fibromyalgia Professor Choy said it was hard to investigate pain with doctors feeling there is nothing they can identify to reach a diagnosis. Many controversies have been removed by trying not to label patients. He said MRI scans show the structure of the subject but not how the organ or tissuing was functioning. Brain functions can be seen and the magnetic properties in the brain are changed by the blood flow. Since the MRI uses magnets the brain functioning can now be seen.

Brain scans have even shown a reaction when red-hot chilli peppers are placed on the skin, with pain registered in certain areas of the brain. Pain results from a pain response and activates areas of the brain. The scan is useful as a tool to see how pain is perceived in FMS using pressure applied to the thumbnails, a sensation for pain against the pressure, can be detected. When this is applied to someone with FMS the signal to the brain can be identified to see if it correlates to the pain felt. So the pain is not just in your head.

In ‘normals’ increased pressure eventually results in pain. In someone with FMS pain is triggered in the brain much sooner. This confirms the patient was not lying.

Professor Choy confirmed there are areas in the brain where normals and those with FMS show differences. Those with FMS were found to have less activity is regions of the brain than ‘normals’.

FMS patients react differently to normals, as their brain inhibitor is not working. They do not respond well to morphine. The brain produces its own morphine-type drugs. As the inhibitor does not work the natural drug produced by the brain is also reduced.

Sleep is very important and there is a link between sleep quality and pain. Good sleep reduces pain to manageable levels but the pain may not go away. Researchers are working towards identifying the relevant pathways and how to clear them. The focus is now on research to improve sleep,

Aims in the treatment of FMS include reducing pain, improving functions, better quality of life, and allowing patients to self manage. It has been identified that FMS is a complex and herogenetic condition and not everyone with fibromyalgia is the same.

Three sub groups within FMS have been identified and this is significant enough to show that blanket or individually tailored treatment would be needed. In trials random meds are given and there have been similar observations about 3 sub groups. Drugs trialed in the USA revealed similar results with sub groups in different pathways. Some patients have more sleep disturbances, mood changes or depression. Depression can lead to poor sleep patterns and hinders the ability to cope. Researchers are trying to develop treatments suitable for each individual pathway for patients. To date there is not one magic cure but with these small steps forward it is hoped that one day there may be one drug to help all fibromites.

Professor Choy said they were trying to educate doctors on what FMS actually is, and explain to the patients’ relatives more about the pain they cannot see.

Exercise may hurt but if you do not exercise you lose muscle tone, which can make fatigue worse. It is important to push on doing gradually more each day. Best time to exercise is in the evening followed by a warm bath and bed to enhance sleep quality.

Professor Choy confirmed medical guidelines could be sent to GPs on request to FMA UK – http://www.fibromyalgia-associationuk.org/general-articles-highlights-208/271-medical-pack-html

Report by Leanne Daniels

Dr Peter Fisher Chirr, MB, FRCP, FFHom is Clinical Director and Director of Research at the Royal London Homoeopathic Hospital, London, Physician to HM Queen Elizabeth II and chaired the World Health Organization’s working group on homeopathy, whose report is due for publication soon.

Talking about fibromyalgia and homeopathy he described this as treatment of like with like. It is different from herbal medicines and is often confused with this. Homeopathic treatment is for the person not the disease. One of the conditions treated may be a bee sting with pain, swellings, relieved by cold and worse with pressure. The preparation to cure the condition would be one part of the mother tincture, and maybe 99 parts of water.

Dr Fisher reported that at the last survey in 1998 8% of the population was using homeopathic remedies with 470,000 users nationwide. This related particularly to the chronically ill. The growth in users is between 12% and 13% annually.

Clinical research on Rhus Toxicoderdron for FMS using double blinds with placebos and homeopathic pills showed 25% of FMS patients responded to treatment in just over a month. Tender Points cannot be reduced but these will respond and get worse if these points feel the condition is getting worse. Overall people did better taking the pills than those on the placebo treatment.

Dr Fisher felt a condition with normal care and homeopathic treatment would work better offering a broader package of treatment than just normal care. He said people went to the Royal Homeopathic Hospital for treatment because other treatments did not work, or gave unwanted side effects, with the majority of patients responding well and improving.

The advantage of using homeopathic treatments was you could do it yourself, based on a small number of typical symptoms, it treats the person and not the disease. There are a limited number of homeopathic remedies, compared to many medications available, and it does not need a practitioner. It also has low dilution content compared to high dilution with meds.

Dr Fisher spoke of the symptoms homeopathic remedies could help and the treatments used. Homeopathic treatment was available on the NHS but it was not easy to get. These treatments seem to work for fibromyalgia. With Choose & Book you can advise your GP you wish to be referred to the Royal Homeopathic Hospital in Great Ormond Street, London, or do it yourself on the Internet.

Denise Rhodes reported -

Professor B K Puri MA (Can tab), PhD, MB, Chirr, BSc (Hones) MathCAD, MRCPsych, DipStat, PG Cert Maths, MMath, is at Hammersmith Hospital and Imperial College London, he has carried out pioneering research work and is a world-leading neuroscience and biochemistry expert.

Professor Basant Puri asked is Fibromyalgia associated with changes in brain anatomy? Previous studies show no grey matter reduction in normal healthy patients and fibromyalgia sufferers. This is in contrast to patients with psychiatric conditions.

His very recent study tested FMS sufferers against a healthy control group and identified loss of grey matter in relation to fatigue.

The tests were carried out using very sophisticated MRI scanners at a higher level than normally used 1.5T(Teslas ) Teslas are measures of magnetic strength. His tests were carried out using 3T and a totally unbiased research method called VBM approach.

His conclusions are that there is degeneration in grey matter in areas of the brain as a result of visual stimulus overload, and problems of coordinating motor and visual tasks, along with problems with sequenced complicated actions.

Denise Rhodes wrote the following reported –

Dr Cathy Price MB BCH, DCH, FRCA, FFPMRCA is a Consultant in Pain Management, Southampton University Hospital NHS Trust and a member of the British Pain Society who has an interest in fibromyalgia said there was a need to focus on patient needs rather than on conditions.

She said pain services offers a multi-disciplinary team approach, which includes psychologists, doctors, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, pharmacists, nurses, acupuncturists and job advisors in order to improve the quality of life. Dr Price said 70% of patients at discharge report positive results as against 30% who feel that it has been of little or no benefit.

Dos and Don’ts for FM –

• Do promote balance in activities
• Manage depression
• Discuss pros and cons of therapies, treatments, and strategies.
• Don’t use opoids
• Use Pain Toolkit booklet

Useful sources for FM information:

HYPERLINK “http://www.patient” http://www.patient.co.uk and /healthyFM.htm
HYPERLINK “http://www.18weeks” http://www.18weeks website dept of health – pain

Dr Price is the clinical lead for the National Pain Audit and argues that getting information into GP surgeries, hospitals and pharmacies is vital, so anything we can do to promote FM in this way will help us all.

She emphasised how important pacing is and how it is difficult to achieve – it may take months and help is so limited. Southampton has dropped organised courses such as 6 weeks on hydrotherapy etcetera, in favour of a cafeteria approach where individuals can take bits of services according to their individual needs. She referred fibromites to ICAS an independent body who will support patients to fight their corner. She also referred us to PALS who are also very helpful.

A question was asked regarding whether the very high number of GPs who are either non-believers, or non-supporters will reduce as further training, younger doctors come into the system. She said that more training and awareness is having an effect, often via e learning – online. She also said that Dr Liam Donaldson, the Chief Medical Officer, is promoting greater awareness of the condition.


Report by Leanne Daniels

Dr Ian H Treasaden MB BS LRCP MRCS FRCPsych LLM Head of Forensic Neurosciences, Lipid Neuroscience Group, Imperial College, London.

Dr Treasaden discussed mood disorders associated with FM and the management of nutrition. He spoke about normal and abnormal depression and FMS and mood disorders. He said Charles Darwin had fibromyalgia. He wrote books about species after years of travels and would suffer a fibro flare when defending his theories.

He believed the causes included hyper exatability of the nervous system, brain functions, and altered brain waves that deal with pain. Management would include a mixture of drugs and non-drug treatments plus antidepressants. On the non-medicines he included walking and exercise, hydrotherapy, CBT (cognitive behaviour therapy) that challenges negative attitudes to symptoms, plus a multi-disciplinary approach, which is rare to find.

On mood disorders he said depression causes could be more than a low mood. Periodic low moods can improve over time without treatment. Grief can be confused with depression. The Doctor spoke about Bipolar, which had replaced the manic depressant illness.

Depression symptoms included low mood, no feelings or tears, loss of interest, socially withdrawn and no interest in hobbies or work. In severe cases that can include suicidal thoughts, low self esteem, helplessness and pessimistic, loss of appetite or even weight gain, constipation, lack of sex drive, impotence, poor sleep and paranoid.

Those with FMS and depression often have headaches, worry about their symptoms and are delusional. Management can include counselling, self help, CBT, exercise and antidepressants for 6-9 months. Omega 3 is good for depression, elevating your mood and reducing anxiety. His recommendations included medication to help sleep, exercises, brain exercises and nutritional management.

Report by Leanne Daniels

Dr Nick Avery MB BS LRCP MRCS MFHom from the Natural Practice at Winchester & Eastbourne helps patients within the Health Service benefit from complementary techniques for IBS, CFS, Eczema, Allergies, Asthma and Migraine, using homeopathy for the emotional component of the illness.

Fibromyalgia is a very common condition that is poorly served by conventional medicine. In his experience, the key features are extreme fatigue, muscle pain and emotional disturbance. Interestingly the emotional aspect is the reason why patients suffer – otherwise the illness would just be interesting! Anti-depressants do not deal with this – they can help elevate mood in some patients but they do not address specific emotions. Similarly fixing the underlying fatigue state cannot be helped by drugs, which are mainly designed to block symptoms rather than create energy.

Many patients that Dr Avery treats suffer from underlying mitochondrial failure. Mitochondria are present in most cells of the body and this is where the ATP cycle occurs, providing the energy needed for all cellular functions. A blood test has now been developed which can identify which of the two underlying possible problems is causing the low energy state. There is a lack of raw materials to make the necessary ingredients involved in the process and some kind of block in the circuit usually from a chemical / drug or other toxic substance. The only way to treat these abnormalities is to correct the underlying nutritional problem – there is either an absorption problem or nutrients are lost – or to use some kind of ‘detox’ technique.

Neither of these treatment modalities is available from conventional practitioners – despite the fact that the condition has an underlying demonstrable biochemical explanation. The Doctor showed a scientific approach to the condition, sorting out problems with absorption, retention of nutrition and the use of a variety of treatment modalities designed to improve energy levels, pain and emotional disturbance. Much of the talk is based on 15 years’ experience of helping patients who suffer from fibromyalgia – many of whom (but not all) have done very well. He intends to concentrate on what can actually be done in the light of our current understanding.

Report by Leanne Daniels

Dr Robert Lister BSc PhD FBS C Biol. is a Director of Phyla Ltd, a health care consultancy and Director of Cubic Ltd, which develop innovative medical electronic devices. He is Chairman of the Institute of Brain Chemistry and Human Nutrition at London Metropolitan University.

Introducing Linda Horncastle Dip COT SROT, Group Leader South Bucks FM SG, Dr Lister said due to FM she had stopped work. Thanks to the Alpha-Stim she has returned to work as an Occupational Therapist.

Dr Lister spoke of a pilot study relating to chemical imbalances, which showed a 60% improvement with microcurrent stimulation, but he felt something else was going on in the brain. Many people suggested the pains were a figment of the imagination and various drugs were needed to treat the condition. He felt there as ‘faulty wiring’ on the malfunctioning connections to the nervous system although imbalances may be able to fixed there was evidence that brain stimulation can modify the signals.

Dr Lister referred to the influences we feel and the chemical receivers. But when the muscle or bone is injured the body sets up an electrical current. Electricity can affect the brain. Some elements may be faulty and disconnected but this can be changed by introducing the microcurrent. By changing the electrical status this can alter the way we behave. People with psychological disorders had purely behavioural problems and these could be improved by talking.

The brain is made up of a lot of active centres and neuroscientists were using deep brain stimulations for diseases such as Parkinsons. He made reference to CES Cranial Electric Stimulation, which produced a similar effect to deep brain stimulation at a cost of £250.

Stimulation can provide relaxation in some parts of the brain and stimulation in others. It can block pain, reduce anxiety, increase positive effects and alleviate insomnia. The stimulation can also change the concentration of chemicals, releasing more so the energy levels are increased,

Studies in the USA have helped pain, anxiety, stress, muscle tension and insomnia. In recent trials based on 500 patients the majority received between up to 99% relief of symptoms and headaches. There were moderate improvements on trials involving 2,500 patients in RSD, FMS, myofascial pain and migraines.

Talking about Linda he told her story and said she had FMS for 20 years but was now walking again thanks to the microcurrent. Dr Lister confirmed microcurrents had been used in the USA for 29 years and were safe and claimed 90% success rate. At a lower power than TENS machines the effect is cumulative where the TENS stops when you turn it off. The machines use probes and sticks.

Linda’s group had tried the microcurrent machines and reported improvements in 3 weeks. While it is not a magic cure it should be used most days and then mobility improves and fibro fog disappears. There are no side effects except perhaps some tingling.

Report by Clare Palmer ANOM

Dr Raymond Perrin DO PhD, Hon. Senior Lecturer, School of Public Health and Clinical Sciences, UCLAN, Registered Osteopath and Specialist in CFS. He spent 16 years researching medical and scientific evidence while treating CFS/ME/ Fibromyalgia patients with of the Perrin Technique.

Dr Perrin explained his treatment, based on manual drainage of toxins from the central nervous system, could relieve many of the symptoms of fibromyalgia. Some doctors treat fibromyalgia (FMS) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) separately, while others think they are actually the same thing – or at least, variations of the same condition. According to the Arthritis Foundation, research shows that 50 to 70 percent of people with one diagnosis also fit the criteria for the other.

Raymond Perrin’s earlier research at the University of Salford in conjunction with the University of Manchester, coupled with the hundreds of successful clinical case studies and the latest findings in neurophysiology, has provided strong evidence that CFS involves a disturbance of the drainage of toxins from the brain and muscles? These poisons often enter body in the form of viruses, bacteria and other microbes, parasitic infection or due to environmental toxins such as pesticides. Yeasts, bacteria, viruses, parasites, pesticides and heavy metals have all been implicated in cases on Fibromyalgia.

Osteopath and bioscientist Ray Perrin, who has developed this treatment technique over the past twenty years, showed how simple measures can bring relief to the patient and explained the possible patho-physiological pathways that lead to this terribly debilitating disease. The basis of this condition being a toxic overload of the brain and spine affecting the sympathetic nervous system, can over stimulate the peripheral nerves leading to pain and muscle spasms etc.

Dr Perrin stressed that although The Perrin Technique has brought much relief to many, it is not a cure-all treatment. In cases of fibromyalgia it should be used in conjunction with other therapies such as acupuncture and hypnotherapy. Supplements of vitamins and minerals, omega 3 and 6 fatty acids and pacing are all important in the overall therapy. His best-selling book The Perrin Technique, Hammersmith Press, London, 2007, sold out with a conference discount and is available from most good book supplies.

Report by Leanne Daniels

Andrea Barr MRSS (T) is a Shiatsu teacher/Complementary Pain Specialist, interested in FM, and has lectured in Switzerland, Austria and UK. She runs Pilgrim Hospital Boston Pain Clinic, Lincs. Talking about the logical empowerment approach to pain managements, she looked at the physical symptoms of FMS.

People who eat carbohydrates may suffer from an intolerance of this substance that can also lead to many of the symptoms associated with fibromyalgia she said recommending that oats and rye should be retained but most carbohydrates should be removed from the diet.

Andrea Barr referred to emotional symptoms including questioning yourself, the pressure of time, being self critical if doing nothing, feeling stressed, concerned with details and a low level depression.

The Autonomic nervous system – or fight and flight feelings – often resulted in difficulty expressing feeling, feeling under threat, while our bodies undergo a series of dramatic changes in blood flow, digestive tract, and the muscles. Signs of flight or fight syndrome are poor sleep with an inability to shut down, tight shoulders/neck, digestive upsets, regular headaches. The fight or flight feelings can stem from childhood, long term trauma, too much activity and no calmness, and undetected stress.

Referring to rest, digest and repair Andrea Barr said the heart rate drops, blood pressure falls, respiration slows and deepens. Blood flow is re-established, the immune and lymphatic systems are supported, and you feel relaxed, calm and refreshed if you slept well.

Summarising she said the body can only repair itself during rest and digest. During fight or flight the rest does nothing for the body. Traumas and triggers can put a patient in a fight or flight condition. She described how the brain reacted during this sensation.

Resources to encourage better sleep included EFT, thought field therapy, cognitive behaviour therapy, yoga, medication and breathing, Shiatsu and cranial treatments. For more help email andrea_barr@hotmail.com or ring 01522 521 817.

Report by Denise Rhodes

Dr Nina Bailey BSc, PhD is a nutritional scientist working in dietary health and nutritional intervention in disease, with emphasis on the role of fatty acids in fibromyalgia, depression and ME. She has a DVD, which explains how to manage IBS that at least 50% of FM/CFS/Depressives/chronic headache sufferers experience.

Basically her argument is that there is no perfect dietary cure but findings show that red meat, particularly if seared/charred/barbequed produce carbonation. That produces ammonia, which leads to inflammation in the gut and is extremely bad for IBS just as many sweeteners are, such as xylotomy and sorbitol. Also insoluble fibers such as whole-wheat grains, bran, unpeeled fruit, salad greens, fried foods are in question. An expansion of this is on the http://www.drninabailey.com site. Dr Bailey said information is available on her websites http://www.igennus-hn.com, http://www.drninabailey.com and from ninabailey@aoum.org.

Report by Denise Rhodes

Dr Mageb Agour MB, BS, MRCPsych recently presented his latest research findings into sleep disorders in this area at a major international medical conference in Italy in September 2009, looked at objective sleep management.

The gold standard test is
• In a laboratory where subject is wired up to record all body functions.
• A device that looks like a watch, strapped to the wrist and used in one’s own home. This is programmed to record movement and defines when/when not asleep
• There are 5 stages of sleep with normally 3 – 4 cycles per night.
• The longer we sleep the more we dream. But dream is only achieved in stage 5 (REM)
• Stage 1 light sleep/dozing low eye movement, often slightly aware and easily aroused
• Stage 2 eye movement stops, slower brainwaves
• Stage 3 Delta waves deeper stage
• Stage 4 No eye movement or muscle activity
• Stage 5 REM breathing increases, rapid eye-movement – muscles paralyzed

Babies spend 50% of sleep time in REM but with aging there are fewer REM stages in adults.

• Primary Sleep Disorders
• Narcolepsy
• Sleep apnea
• Abnormal behaviour
• Sleepwalking/talking
• Night terrors
• Secondary Sleep Disorders
• Mental disorder
• General medical conditions
• Substance users anything from caffeine to cocaine and heroin
• Sleep and FM
• Restless leg syndrome – Periodic limb movement – involuntary (if severe may need treatment)
• Bruxism (Grinding teeth)
• Alpha wave intrusion

In Fibromites non-refreshing sleep is a result of Alpha waves intruding into Betawave stage causes REM state to leave. Remedies are to reduce mental activity before bed, avoid reading in bed or watching TV.

Melatonin is seen as a useful tool and is now available from many GPs or online.
Short term sleeping tablets and treating underlying problems. Natural remedies such as Valerian, which performs in a similar way to Oxizipan or St John’s Wort, which is often used for depression.

However, when using alternative and complementary medications it is important to check with GP and/or Pharmacist to avoid clash with prescribed medication.
Chamomile, a Fish Oils High content omega 3 vital.

Report by Leanne Daniels

Andy Pothecary MPharma (Hons), ACPP Pharmacist is a Senior Pharmacist at Worthing Hospital. Andrew’s interest in fibromyalgia began in 2004 when his wife was diagnosed with the condition. He hopes to undertake research and develop a specialist role in this area in the future.

In his Pharmacist Pick & Mix presentation Andy Pothecary spoke about Medicines Licensing in the UK explaining the Drug Company identifies promising new compound, applies for a patent, and carries out further laboratory trials. The company then applies for permission to carry out clinical trials. When completed they apply for marketing authorisation (MA). They can then sell the product within the EU.

He described the types of clinical trials a drug is submitted to.

Phase I: Pre-clinical testing, with healthy male volunteers – first time drug used in humans.
Phase II: Small-scale trial at a limited number of centers, in which the drug is used in patients with the disease.
Phase III: Larger-scale trial across many centers, with a wider range of patients
Phase IV: Post-marketing surveillance – product in use but rare or long-term side effects identified

Use of unlicensed medicines

These are medicines without a PL/MA. This might be because they are undergoing clinical trials, are to treat rare conditions, or because the MA has been withdrawn or surrendered. If unlicensed medicines are used, the prescribing doctor assumes full responsibility and liability for any adverse events that might occur.

What is “Named-patient Basis?”

Process that enables patients to be supplied with an unlicensed drug. “Named patient” means the drug is being supplied (to the hospital, pharmacy, etc) for the use of a specific patient. Depending on the drug concerned, it can be fairly simple to obtain or involve lots of form filling by doctor and pharmacy.

Off-license/off-label Medicines

When a product is granted an MA, this specifies which conditions the product can be used to treat. However the product might also be used to treat other conditions. This use is termed “off-license” or “off-label” because it is not covered by the terms of the MA. Again, this means that the prescribing doctor will assume greater responsibility and liability if anything goes wrong.

Why is this relevant?

How many medicines are currently licensed for the treatment of fibromyalgia in the UK? None! He spoke about the use of ‘old drugs’ normally prescribed for other conditions but used for fibromyalgia although these may not be licensed for this. He also described the various drugs prescribed by GPs.

Report by Denise Rhodes

Gemma Kingsman, professional fundraiser, reported on Finding the Funds – and outlined what funds are available, mainly concentrating on Awards for All, which is the National Lottery.

For large pots of money £30,000 eg can be funded for up to 3 years. Smaller pots up to £5,000 can be applied for such as sessional worker funds, equipment needs, marketing the group. She advised ringing lottery help lines for how to submit and what for. They are very helpful.

Grassroots Awards are nationally available but administered locally via a local community foundation. The cash comes from wealthy donator philanthropists and organisations. Groups applying must have a written constitution with clear and simple rules and regulations, be a not-for- profit organisation, able to identify a need in the community, which the group will serve. Can make more than one application in two categories: up to £900 and from £900 – £5.000. The following year application can be made for further cash to support further needs. The Grassroots Grant might be for rent, equipment, refreshments, and volunteer costs regarding running costs.

The Lions Clubs, Rotary Group will respond to a letter for support and the website “Guide Star” is a source of information. Many Disability sites will provide sources of funding. Her company “Consultaid” charges £35 to fill in a grant application form but she referred delegates to free help in the community.

Talking fundraising we are looking for some help from our friends. We believe we can persuade a couple of American FMS doctors to come to conference next year. But we need to pay their airfare and expenses. We may be looking at approximately £500 per doctor. If you are coming next year and are able to do a bit of fund raising towards hearing these USA doctors who are often light years ahead of us in some things FMS, we would love to shout about what you are doing and would really welcome your support. Email me jeannehambleton @ mac.com if you can help. While April 2011 is some while away we need to get in the diaries of these doctors. However small your fundraising is it will all add up. Guess what – I already have two bookings. Thanks Ann and Gina.

THANKS
Finally I would like to thank FMA UK for their great support with help and wonderful conference bags, which members have said they will carry their meetings. Without their help the delegates might have had Tesco plastic carrier bags for their conference papers. Odd everyone liked the bags but no one said anything about the paperwork we spent hours stuffing inside….

Clare Palmer’s Sunday input with doctors was also appreciated. Thanks also to Teresa White and Lorely Day (Chichester FM SG), for their great work with the tombola, raffles and auction. Thanks also to Horndean members Tracy Gibbon and Andy Andrews for their major contribution to the auction with another lady fibromite whose name sadly I did not get.

My gratitude to Pauline Dee and Leanne Daniels who spent hours at the front desk dealing with enquiries. There for the cause, Pauline and Glenna Frost but neither managed to see or hear any speaker or visit a workshop. Thanks also to Glenda Philpott and Martin for spending hours filming speakers to produce a DVD of the event. Watch this space for news of when it is available. Like most conference areas the room was dark for power points and mobile telephone quiet signals may have interfered with the recording but we live in hope.

My apologies to all those who offered help with notes and speakers. I ran out of time and just had no time to get together to work out the details. I am sorry. I am grateful to Denise Rhodes and Leanne Daniels who took notes anyway and fired them off in time for me to get this article out in reasonable time.

Thanks to Bob McKinlay and Gareth Duval for organizing the golf and Chris Crick for sorting out the deep-sea fishermen and lone fisherwoman, and to the fossil hunters who understood when we said their ‘leader’ was grounded in the Caribbean under an ash cloud.

Also thanks to Tony Ede (FMS SAS) and Simon Stuart (Worthing & Ferring FM SG) for taking care of projectors, laptops and power points and making it happen. Gratitude to Bill Craven and friends for the race night. I am grateful to fibromites Karen Henderson who did a workshop and sorry Sam Piggott had a flare. Also thanks to Alan Perry for the photographs of the FollyPogs Ball he has donated and to Nene Valley FM SG who donated £63 to the research fund.

Thanks also to all the speakers who gave their time without reservation, those who ran workshops, the exhibitors, and the pamper therapists. Your support was appreciated by everyone.

I also appreciate those who understood how much work was involved and have volunteered to ‘take a section’ of the conference for next year. Great news and thanks.

South Downs Holiday Village Management, staff and the Head Chef did all they could to make us comfortable. The dining room and kitchen staff were all exceptional and patiently dealt with our special diets. They were more attentive than some expensive hotels I have stayed at giving freely of their usual time off. Well done and hope your company appreciates your high standard of care. We fibromites were really grateful to everyone on site for making us very very welcome.

Finally my gratitude must also go to Sarah, my ‘rock’ that did everything pamper for us and my husband Arthur who worked with me who wrote databases, was tolerant to list bookings and payments and the endless mails. Forgive me if I have missed anyone. I am a fibromite and I do forget. And a huge thanks to those who came. You helped to make the weekend memorable for us. Without your support none of this would have happened. THANK YOU Jeanne

Cheltenham woman in mission to raise awareness of fibromyalgia

From the FMS Global News Desk of Jeanne Hambleton (UK)
Courtesy thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/news/

Monday, May 04, 2009

ALICE Reeve says more needs to be done to help sufferers of fibromyalgia.

The 34-year-old was diagnosed with the condition, which causes wide- spread musculo-skeletal pain and fatigue, 10 years ago. The illness has become so acute she has been forced to seek private treatment to complement the pain management she gets on the NHS.

Alice, who lives in Evesham Road, Cheltenham, is now trying to raise awareness of the condition and get more treatments available for free.

She says she has to travel to a private hospital in London to get injections of vitamins, minerals, magnesium and pain relief, which cost £150.

Awareness of fibromyalgia and treatments for the condition are due to be debated in the House of Commons tomorrow, and Alice is planning to attend.

EDITOR’S NOTE:To view of the May 5 historic fibromyalgia debate log on to
http://www.fibromyalgia-associationuk.org/content/view/385/1/

To read it try: http://fmsglobalnews.wordpress.com/2009/05/09/mps-call-for-fibromyalgia-education-for-doctors-in-first-ever-fms-debate-in-uk-parliament/

She said: “I feel I should be able to have treatment close to home. Another part of fibromyalgia is that you are very, very tired all the time so the travelling does not help.”

Alice has not been able to work in recent years because of the condition, but previously taught English abroad and completed a degree and a masters. She wants to address the stigma attached to fibromyalgia and change people’s opinions.

“Because people cannot see the illness they cannot understand it. Many people have said to me ‘get a life and go and get a job’.

“There is a lot of stigma attached to it. People see it as yuppy flu,” she added.

Alice’s mum Patricia Reeve, who lives with her daughter, is concerned that other families of sufferers do not understand the condition.

She said: “People who suffer need more emotional support from their families. Some families try to bury their head in the sand over it.”

A spokesman for NHS Gloucestershire said: “We are sorry to hear of the patient’s illness.

“NHS Gloucestershire is always concerned with achieving the best possible health outcomes for its patients within the resources available.

“There are some treatment options available through the NHS to help ease the symptoms of fibromyalgia but some patients may prefer to use complementary options.

“It is important to stress that while we do not routinely fund complementary treatment for this condition at this time, we will always consider a request from a patient’s doctor if they believe there to be exceptional clinical circumstances.

“NHS Gloucestershire’s Review Panel takes into account information provided by the patient, GP and hospital consultant and any previous treatment and its outcome. It also takes into account guidance from NICE on any particular treatment, where relevant.”

COMMENTS (26)

I have suffered with Fibromyalgia for many years but was only given a positive diagnoses this February. I tis the most awful disease and the pain and sleeplessness, tiredness and all the other symptoms that come along with it are so debilitating. No-one seems to understand at all. I recently applied for DLA and was turned down becasue my GP report siad I wasnt disabled, which is so unfair as I cannot walk on some days and cannot work at all at the moment as I feel so ill all the time and am in so much pain. My consultant also said in his report that I can walk up to half a mile and I’d love to know where he got that idea from! He saw me once and has no idea of how I live my life day to day!

I feel like no-one wants to help and that my GP just doesnt want to understand this illness. It is time the Govt took notice of this horrible disease and did more to help sufferers. I have no income other than Employment and support allowance and I will soon not be entitled to even that as I live with my boyfriend and he is expected to pay all my bills when this money runs out which is so unfair. I cannot get any help with prescriptions and it just seems that I pay out endless amounts of money on medication and get very little relief.

If one of these Govt ministers had to live with this condition for just one day and suffer the excrutiating pain and tiredness they would soon be trying to sort out ways to help sufferers.

This link lists the 50 most common symptoms of Fibromyalgia http://fmsupport.org.uk/2008/04/50-signs-of-fibromyalgia it might just make people stop and think for a moment if they try to imagine living with all of these every day of your life!

The worst thing is that some days you think you are never going to make it to the end of a day and that you are truely going mad because of this stupid brain fog thing that makes everything so jumbled up in your head and prevents you from thinking properly, it is so frustrating!

I have tried to find a support group in my area but to no avail and travelling is out of the question as I am so tired all the time.

My GP has provided me with no information and anything I have managed to find out for myself via the internet he will not take heed of as he says that a lot of the information we find on the web can be misleading which is just a cop out!

This is the first article I have ever seen connected to any newspaper,so congratulations for bringing this to the publics attention finally. But why has it taken so long for the media to finally realise that there is something newsworthy in reporting the unfairness of how people with this disease are treated by the system.

Maybe if all the UK sufferers got together and presented ourselves at the House of Commons people might sit up and take notice!!
Tracy Hicks, Godmanchester, Cambs
commented on 18-May-2009 11:46

I was extremely intereted to read Alice’s views and congratulate her on her struggle to bring awareness for this condition. I am not a sufferer myself but know well someone who is and the devistating effect it has had on their quality of life. It is shocking that someone should have to travel from Cheltenham to London for basic treatment.which should certainly be provided by the National Health Service. Let’s hope that someone takes notice.
Stella, London
commented on 17-May-2009 22:34

TONY HOWES FEELS NHS A SOCIAILIST IDEA L IN 50S SHOULD SUPPORT ANY ILLNESS AS THEIR IS NO PRICE ON LIFE BUT MONEY IS BECOMING TO IMPORTANT .. IMAY BE LITTLE IDEALISTIC JOHN LENNON FAN BUT PLEASE LETS NOT PUT A PRICE ON LIFE ESPECIALLY IN ALICES CASE AS WE ALL LOVE HER
Tony Howes, London
commented on 16-May-2009 10:09

Unless someone famous get FMS , Media and others don’t care. We need to push , we deserve a cure and soild treatment, Fighting with insurace companys to get medications to make my life livable are only fair I am a human being and I suffer. Why won’t Oprah set up and do a show on FMS ?
Robin Smith, California
commented on 15-May-2009 06:35

It took me around 22 years to get a diagnosis, I saw Dr after Dr as a child and most said it was all in my head, one sent me to Physio with a covering letter saying to humor me.

It was 2007 when I had knee surgery again and I was left unable to bend or straighten the knee afterwards my Dr sent me to see a Pain Specialist thinking that I had Regional Pain Disorder.

When I got to the Clinic I was asked to fill out a questionnaire so I did and waited, while I was waiting to see the Dr he was sitting in his office reading my notes all of them, and reading my answers to the questionnaire, after 20 mins or so he called me in, he asked me key questions then told me that in no uncertain terms that I have Fibromyalgia, I did not know weather to kiss hug or cry, after so long of not 1 single person in the medical profession since I was 12 years old believed me or seemed to care to find out why my body hurt so much there was this one Dr who now I felt was my new best friend, finally to have something to say to people when they ask what have you done to yourself when I walk with crutches, and funny looks when people see me using a scooter when I am shopping and parking in disabled bays people thinking to themselves she doesn’t look like she deserves that bay. I had a response I could finally say what I had, I don’t want sympathy although some would be nice sometimes, I want understanding not odd looks and comments about parking and using the scooter.

FMAUK have helped me so much I go to group meetings and talk to fellow sufferers which is a great help especially as they are the only people who really understand what it is like to be us. I am lucky with my Husband and Children who do understand and my Family who have always stood by me and knew I was hurting and were as frustrated as me not knowing why.

TREAT THE PATIENT NOT THE INJURY OR REASON YOU WERE SENT.

That is why I finally got diagnosed, My pain Dr treated me not just my knee which was why I was sent to him, if all medical personal think this way we would all be so much better off.

FIBROMYALGIA needs to be more commonly known in the medical profession to stop someone else having to wait 22 years to get diagnosed.
Jaki, Wirral
commented on 14-May-2009 12:32

i have had f.m. for now going on 11 years,the struggle to find out what was wrong ith me took many years and seeing many drs…I now still live with the pain , the not sleeping all nite,and the parts of my body that does not always work right, to some points i just don’t go to far from home ,i miss out on family dues at times because i just don’t have the energy to attend.Some days i have feeling of not even wanting to talk to anyone ,I do have a very stronge support team of family and friends but still some days i feel like if i say again i dont feel well i feel like i am weak .It will always be a up hill battle.Even foods can cause problems for me so again i have to watch what i eat.And if i have to run across a dr that still in this day and age that says there is no such thing ,i think to myself then walk in my shoes for a day .Again in Canada it is a fight to get any kind of disablity for f.m.they tell you if you are not in a wheel chair you are not looked at but my question to that is who will hire someone that some days can barly get out of bed or that your feel sick or am so tired from not sleeping the nite before that there is no way you can hold down a job.Let alone some days of even getting dressed as again cloths can feel very tight on a person let alone the energy to get dressed.yes i know there is meds out there that work but again not for everyone,as some meds make a person even feel sicker. if i had one wish that would be that some day they will find a cure for everyone because again everyone comes by this f.m in more then one way ,any were from a car accident to something bad happened in thier life ,also to much stress again a big part of a very big no no for anyone with f.m. yet we live in a very stressfull world.It is not only very hard on the people that live with f.m. but also our loved ones watching us go throw this .So for anyone living with f.m. i wish you a pain free day .and i tell anyone i talk to read up on anything you can find about f.m.and if you have a dr that does know about f.m. talk to him about all your feeling and about any info you run across.and don’t give up on finding a dr that knows about f.m it is real it is not in your head .thank you for listening to what i have had to say and i hope i have been of some help.
louise chandler, canada
commented on 14-May-2009 04:21

I was diagnosed with fibromyalgia in 2005. I have progressively gotten worse since then. I suffer daily with this debilitating disease, and it is a full-time job just to manage the pain, and all the symptoms that goes with this illness. I hardly ever sleep…and I suffer terribly with concentration(fibro fog). Thank you Alice, for getting the word out. This is a real illness people suffer from, I know…because I am one of them. Fibromyalgia needs to be taken seriously, treated just like every other debilitating disease out there. May 12, 2009 was “National Fibromyagia Awareness Day”. I hope many were educated, and will continue to be educated on this invisible illness.
Janet, North America
commented on 13-May-2009 23:00

I was diagnosed with Fibromyalgia a year and a half ago. I have had symtoms for years. I can barely walk on somedays. The pain in my back and legs makes me cry everyday. My doc has faxed a note to Michigan Works that I can do everything and I have no restrictions. I’m clearly misunderstood. I don’t know why my doc would do this to me. Just because you can’t see it doesn’t mean that it’s not there. We need more docs to understand this diease. The pain is real and it never goes away! I’m so sad and very depressed.
Sandra Busch, Michigan
commented on 13-May-2009 13:45

I have fibromyalgia and have had it for a few years now but was just diagnosed a year and a half ago. My doc just faxed a note to Michigan Works that I have no restrictions and can do anything. The pain I feel everyday sometimes makes me not able to walk. I cry alot and am very depressed. I know that the pain is real. Why did my doc not understand? Why would he put me through this? I’m very sad and misunderstood.
Sandy Busch, Michigan
commented on 13-May-2009 13:40

It is always good when people are aware of illnesses such as this that are often misinterpreted. Sufferers should get more sympathy and therefore more help
angela edwards, Carmarthenshire
commented on 13-May-2009 10:56

It took me 3 years to get a diagnosis of FM and I had to ask fro a referral to a rheumatologist myself. If I hadn’t I’d still be none the wiser. I say a neurologist a few times but he couldn’t find anything wrong so threw me back out into an uncaring system instead of suggesting I see someone else. I was told not to ask to see him again as there wasn’t anything wrong.

A bit more education and understanding in the NHS would go a long way to helping people. We are made to believe it’s all in our heads or down to depression… well you’d be depressed if you were in pain 24/7!

Doctor’s packs with information for your GP can be obtained from FMA UK a registered charity trying to get the word out to as many people as possible.
Gill, S Wales
commented on 13-May-2009 00:46

I have had FMS for about 16 years but was only diagnosed 10 years ago. I had never heard of it, and neither had any one else I knew. 10 years later nothing seams to have changed much. I haven’t worked for 9 years and struggle to get through the day. i rely on my parents for many things and between sleeping / resting and attempting life’s esstentials i don’t have much time or energy for much else. I take amitrypline and fluxotine and would love to be well enough to work again and not rely on benefits. My doctor say that we don’t know what causes it so how can we treat it? More research please, and more publicity – i haven’t seen anything on TV today about Fibromyalgia Awareness Day.
Karen, Worcester
commented on 12-May-2009 19:26

I am 18 years old and have been diagnosed with Fibromyalgia for a while now. Having this illness means i have to use crutches on bad days, I can never go out with friends becauuse i’m too tired, my college work suffers too, and yet we are still not getting recognised as we should be. I’m all for what FibroAction is doing, i think everyone should be aware how debilitating this condition is.
Emma, Lincolnshire
commented on 12-May-2009 18:08

I emailed our local news programme, but didnt even get a mention or indeed a reply. My husband emailed the World Community Grid and the reply from them was “as its not a fatal illness they cannot research it” ok so we all know we wont die from it, but our whole life chages dramatically because of it. Its like being thrown on the scrapheap of life
Anne Walker, Glasgow
commented on 12-May-2009 17:36

At nearly 49, but young for my age, I have a long memory and remember the struggle that sufferers of MS and ME had to get the severity and extent of the conditions to be recognised by the powers that be as being genuine and not figments of the imagination. When reading about fibromyalgia. I read the same kind of stories of discrimination, misunderstanding and to some extent ignorance from the very bodies set up to care for sufferers namely the NHS and H. M. Gov as those writen in the 1970¿s about MS and later about ME. It seems that nothing realy changes, in that the NHS and H. M. Gov have to be dragged kicking and screaming into accepting newly identified and dibilitating conditions that are recognised in other countries. And, possibly the only way to make the NHS and H. M. Gov to see reason is to follow the example of past campains and raise the publics awareness of the condition and keep it there untill that little light in the minds of a ministers turns on and they start singing ¿I¿ve seen the light¿, but until then don¿t hold your breath but keep up the good work.
Keith Sharpe, Basildon
commented on 12-May-2009 15:00

I had heard of this illnes, but until i read your article, like many other people,i was unaware of the severity of this horrendous condition .
Thank you for opening my eyes to the amount of suffering and loss of normal life that these people have to endure.
Gillian Parkes, Moreton in Marsh, Glos.
commented on 12-May-2009 12:05

Fibro is a horrendous life changing illness. i am 22 i cannot work i recently married. no one seems to know what top offer in terms of pain relief. i have to use a stick to walk. what my future holds i have no idea but it doesnt look that bright at the moment. we need all the help we can get to raise awareness of this terrible life changing disease
laura, yorkshire
commented on 12-May-2009 08:43

Many thanks to this newspaper for highlighting this illness. This is an illness of the 21st Century, which most of the population do not know about. Perhaps we could have more tolerance and compassion.
Annie, Cheltenham
commented on 11-May-2009 21:48

I was dignosed in 2007 as having fibro, after about 6 years of lots and lots of tests that all came back normal. I felt like a hypochondriac and was treated like one at times, simply because this is an invisible illness and does not show up in routine tests. My last GP was an idiot who obviously was a non-believer and who refused to prescribed the only mild medication I was taking. I am in pain 24 hours a day, every day of the year, some days I can barely move. Yet the struggle thousands of us have to get any kind of DLA benefit and which is usually refused! This IS a REAL disability, if we had M.S. (no offence to MS sufferer’s) we would be able to access more benefits, more tretments and more understanding so much easier. Life is a struggle as it is, yet we are made to struggle by our own government and health system to access a diagnosis and suitable treatment, as well as the benefits.

I have also tried to raise the awareness for Fibro Day (12th May) by emailing local TV and radio, local newspapers, GMTV, but nobody has returned an email, which just goes to show how ignorant and unsympatheitc and plain disinterested a lot of this country really is. We need this to be recognised by ALL medical professions, ALL government and health departments, and as many people locally and nationally as possible.

Rant over, I’m now going back to bed before I have to pick my children up from school, as if I don’t, I will be ILL for some time and unable to even cook for them, Thank god I have a lovely partner who does understand!
Linda, Merseyside
commented on 11-May-2009 13:13

As the Operations Director of an International Medical Assistance Company, as well a Travel Insurer for people suffering from medical conditions I would just like to express my support for this campaign. All the more so given that my wife has recently been diagnosed with Fibromyalgia.

MIA Online already insures numerous Fibromy’ patients and we are aware of how debilitaing it can be.
Sir Jan Dalrymple, Rayleigh
commented on 11-May-2009 10:01

I was diagnosed with FM in 1992. I have very limited use of left side now and am constantly in pain. I actually use a wheelchair for distances and also have orthotic shoes and crutches. I do not allow this to be my life but can completely understand the frustration when people say ‘you’re just being lazy’ or ‘we all get tired’.
Go to the UK Forum for FM, it is a great release and a chance to chat to fellow sufferes who will never say those things.

It’s hard to have self belief when you want to detract from your physical disabilities and, of course, it alters your everyday routine but we should all support research into it, if only for the future sufferers.
I work part time which is a struggle but I won’t give it up. I am also a single parent of an 11 year old but he is a fantastic support for me, considering it changed his life as well.
Elaine, Tewkesbury
commented on 10-May-2009 15:23

I am 43 and have recently been diagnosed with fibro but have had symptoms for years. I am taking duloxetine and gabapentin for pain relief but find this still leaves me with plenty of pain.

Fatigue is the main problem. I’ve had to give up employment, Open University study, voluntary work and most of my social life. I now struggle to cook and cannot cope with the housework.

The future looks very bleak. There is no hope of returning to full time work but I do not want to spend the rest of my life living off benefits. The pay is lousey and there are no days off from pain and fatigue.
Hazel, Evesham
commented on 08-May-2009 07:45

I had post-viral fatigue after a bout of tonsilitis a year ago January. I have now been diagnosed with Fibromyalgia (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) – my biggest concern is the fuzzy brain (or brain fog) – I have just been referred to the CFS clinic that operates out of Bristol at more local clinics and am awaiting an appointment – just some advice on managing the condition would be really helpful. The pain, especially in my feet and legs is really uncomfortable – I do work, and am taking part in the Sue Ryder Midnight Walk this coming Saturday – am determined this condition will not take over my life completely. My friends will stay with me until I do the walk. They are being very supportive. I feel for anyone who has the same condition, and look forward to seeing some progress in its more formal recognition.
Tracy, Cheltenham
commented on 06-May-2009 18:47

I was diagnosed in December last year with Fibro as my partner calls it, untill then i had never heard of it but have since made contact with another sufferer.As i am on strong painkillers for my back my Dr. has since put me on anatriptoline which i have found helps with it. But i can get it for three or four days a week then have two or three days without it . It seems a cycle that i have told myself to accept it,but as i’m on other meds and painkillers i find wheni got the pain i just found the best position on the sofa and sleep alot.I can wake up in the morning and feel fine then an hour or so later feel ILL.Before i was diagnosed with Fibro my Dr. sent me to the hospital to be tested for Rhumatoid Arthritis the hospital Dr dagnosed the fibro,as i sai put me on Anatriptoline and gave me a booklet about fibro and sent me home with another appointment to see him in 6mths time
bob, Hertfordshire
commented on 04-May-2009 14:25

I too have suffered from this condition for years. Being in constant pain 24 hours a day is exhausting and depressing. Sleep is in short supply as it is impossible to get comfy. If one more person tells me I “look well” I may well scream!! Do magnesium injections help? Many thanks to Alice for taking up the cause. I wish her everything I wish myself.
victoria, cheltenham
commented on 04-May-2009 13:17

The use of local anaesthetic injected intramuscularly as pain relief and the use of injected vitamins and minerals to counteract deficiencies in someone with reduced absorption capabilities is not a complementary therapy.

Using drugs to treat pain is the remit of traditional medicine. Treating vitamin and mineral deficiencies is also part of traditional medicine.
Lindsey Middlemiss, Berkshire
commented on 04-May-2009 12:39

(Copyright Harmsworth Newspaper Printing

http://www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/news/Cheltenham-woman-mission-raise-awareness-fibromyalgia/article-958681-detail/article.html?cacheBust=7vk40nSNjqBF&success=true#community)

My thanks to Sue SB for bringing this story to my attention. It is good to share. I wonder how many more fibromyalgia patients have been refused support by the GP when applying for benefits. It is a pity they cannot try having this invisible disability for a week to see how it really feels and that IT IS REAL!

FOR MORE FIBROMYALGIA STORIES SEE: http://jeannehambleton77.wordpress.com

International Fibromyalgia Awareness Day 12th May 2009

From FMS Global News Desk of Jeanne Hambleton (UK)

In the wake of the historic first ever debate about fibromyalgia in Parliament (Westminster Hall) last week on May 5, the Fibromyalgia Association UK, (FMA UK) praised for its work in helping sufferers, has issued a press release.

The Chairman of the Trustees of FMA UK Ms Pam Stewart said, “A year has passed and what has changed?”


EUROPEAN NETWORKS OF FIBROMYALGIA ASSOCIATIONS & NICE REJECTION

In Brussels, the Written Declaration on Fibromyalgia won a majority of votes. This asked all member states to recognise fibromyalgia and ensure diagnosis and treatment is available. It also stated that research funding should be awarded for fibromyalgia.

“It is likely to be some time before we see the results of this as it is a slow process,” said the Chairman.

“In the UK, the recommendation for guidelines for the treatment of fibromyalgia were not considered to be a priority by the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE). This rejection by NICE which is independent from the government is a blow for UK fibromyalgia sufferers,” said Pam Stewart.

CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER’S ANNUAL REPORT

The annual report from the Government’s Chief Medical Officer Sir Liam Donaldson, which included a whole section on pain and especially chronic pain, gave hope that at least this area of fibromyalgia might be given some attention but it is only part of the range of symptoms and cannot be treated in isolation.

FIBROMYALGIA DEBATE IN THE HOUSE

“We were delighted to have a debate with Ann Keen, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State in the Department of Health, so that questions about the future of fibromyalgia diagnosis and treatment could be assured. This debate was secured by Rob Wilson MP for Reading East and Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Fibromyalgia (APPG).

“Sadly it seemed that complacency with the initiatives already in place means we still have a fight on our hands. Since the Musculoskeletal Service Framework was put in place in 2006, we have not heard that treatment options have improved and we still hear of people being told to go away and live with it.

“We have been told that in one hospital, a mention of fibromyalgia will bar the patient access to further treatment from pain specialists, physiotherapy or other recommended treatment options!

” When asked about training for medical professionals, which Sir Liam Donaldson had mentioned in his report, we were informed that we would have to take this up with the professional bodies involved in accrediting training even though deficiencies in knowledge have been acknowledged,” she said.


DO DOCTORS USE THIS NHS SITE?

However, the new website http://www.NHSevidence.uk was mentioned by the Under Secretary. When fibromyalgia is searched for, this has the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) guidelines that were sent to NICE as a beginning for official UK clinical guidance. This is encouraging if medical professionals use this service. This advocates a multidisciplinary approach for the treatment of fibromyalgia. There are some centres around the country that use this but those with fibromyalgia need all PCTs to have the ability to refer patients with fibromyalgia to a multi-disciplinary team of medical professionals for appropriate treatment.

“It is unacceptable that these specialist clinics are not available on the NHS Choose and Book system thereby denying easy access to sufferers. We hope this debate will have raised the profile of fibromyalgia but it has highlighted that there is still much more to do. People in constant pain should have the right to effective treatment. How can between 1.7 and 2.8 million people living with such a poor quality of life be treated so badly?

..end..

EDITOR’S NOTE: As someone with fibromyalgia I was very pleased to hear Rob Wilson MP had secured this debate. May I also publicly thank the handful of MPs who were in the Chamber to support this plea for support for the neglected people with fibromyalgia. I guess like many of the 2.7 million people diagnosed with fibromyalgia in the UK, I felt the response from the Minister, Department of Health, was a ‘white wash’. As a health professional herself I did believe she wanted to help but it appeared her ‘hands were tied’ by red tape and maybe civil servants’ constraints. She appeared unable to make a commitment sadly.. regardless of pressure from Norman Lamb MP. If there is a will, there must be a way.

Yes I accept there are many conditions causing chronic pain and quite a number who have been given funding for research to find a cure, but we fibromites – the Fibromyalgia Cinderellas, have no funding for research and apparently must endure our pain, a poor quality of life and the huge financial burden that fibromyalgia imposes, not to mention the hoops the Benefits people ask you to jump through.

What makes me mad is the time it takes (at least 2 years) to get a diagnosis and the enormous costs in those 24 months (at least). We spend hours seeing doctors, specialists, having blood tests, x-rays, scans, all in a process of elimination. If over two years we see three or four specialists, doctors and others and it costs, for example, say £5,000 for one person to get diagnosed (I am guessing), just multiply that by 2.7 million people. (Sorry no good at maths.) What a staggering cost that must be when much less could be spent on research in an attempt to save NHS money. Does the Department of Health care about this major drain on resources?

WRITE TO YOUR MP FOR HIS SUPPORT

Send your MP chapter and verse about your aches, pains, symptoms and quality of life or lack of it, the financial burden you face. Urge him to help you by supporting all these cross-party points raised at the debate. It is the MPs who are pulling the purse strings in the ‘corridors of power’.

Ask your MP to support these points and raise them again in Parliament – they are all valid and raised during the fibromyalgia debate on May 5. See the previous story for the full text of that debate.

* Providing better education for doctors enhancing their knowledge about fibromyalgia,

* The importance of fast diagnosis and the provision of treatment,

* For an improvement and wider access to pain management,

* Highlight the lack of focus on the illness in the Department of Health,

* For the Department for Work and Pensions to address the condition and take it more seriously,

* Consideration a nationwide awareness campaign to highlight fibromyalgia syndrome,

As Pam Stewart has said there is much work still to be done.and we have a fight on our hands. You can help from your own home by contacting your MP. Tell him to read the full debate on this website. Be sure to tell him where you live and that you are one of his constituents. He will want you to vote for him at the next election so hopefully he will help you.

How do you contact your MP? Log on to http://www.theyworkforyou.com/ add your post code and click send a message to you MP. Best type it out first and then cut and paste into the little box.

I am considering writing an e petition on the No.10 Downing Street website raising these points. Will you support that and sign it? If so watch this space!

What are you doing on Tuesday,May 12 – our day. Are you celebrating the International Fibromyalgia Awareness Day with some fund raising? Do you have the Fibro What? CD to raise your spirits. If you do nothing else get a copy to help raise funds for research – see http://www.domcollins.co.uk and look at MY SPACE top right hand side. Fibro What? is serious but the three backing tracks will make the family laugh. It is a hoot!

It would be good to hear you have written to your MP. Email me with news from MPs or about Fibro What? on jeannehambleton(@)mac.com. Take care and keep well. Jeanne

MPs CALL FOR FIBROMYALGIA EDUCATION FOR DOCTORS IN FIRST EVER FMS DEBATE IN UK PARLIAMENT

From the FMS Global News Desk (UK)

Courtesy/Source Hansard

by Jeanne Hambleton Copyright 2009

FIBROMYALGIA THE CINDERELLA CONDITION

Fibromyalgia made history on May 5 with a first time debate on the condition in the House of Commons Westminster Hall, prior to International Fibromyalgia Awareness Day (May 12).

Rob Wilson MP, chairman of the all party parliamentary group on fibromyalgia, called on the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health, Ann Keen MP, to assist fibromyalgia sufferers by providing better education for doctors enhancing their knowledge about fibromyalgia. He urged the Department of Health to consider a nationwide awareness campaign to highlight fibromyalgia syndrome, the importance of fast diagnosis and the provision of treatment?

“Do the millions of people who suffer with this illness not deserve at least that from their NHS. It is unsatisfactory that many GPs are not confident or able to diagnose the illness in a timely fashion,” he said.

Stressing education about fibromyalgia is urgently needed and that the Government, through the NHS, could be the catalyst, Rob Wilson suggested the condition is a significant drag on the economy. There were also calls for an improvement and wider access to pain management, and it was felt that there was clearly no focus on the illness in the Department of Health.

Norman Lamb MP described fibromyalgia as something of a Cinderella condition. It is widely misunderstood and there is a great deal of ignorance about it, which has a significant impact on those who suffer from it. He called for the Department for Work and Pensions to address the condition and take it more seriously.

It was reported by Rob Wilson that there were 2.7 million people in the UK suffering with a very common illness – fibromyalgia. It is in fact as common as rheumatoid arthritis and can be even more painful he said.

He said a survey of five European countries had shown that fibromyalgia affects between 2 per cent and 4.5 per cent of the population, or at least one in 50 people, from children to the very elderly. Fibromyalgia had been shown to have more impact on patients’ lives than many other forms of widespread pain and chronic illness.

“I believe that the sheer scale of the illness and the suffering that results from it mean that it is high time fibromyalgia was taken seriously as an issue,” he added.

Rob Wilson made reference to constituent Jean Turner who has been without a diagnosis for years. “I am sure that we would all agree that the 13 years taken to reach a diagnosis in Jean’s case was far too long,” he added.

He suggested that all Jean and other sufferers would ask is to be believed when they say that they are in pain and are not hypochondriacs. Sufferers want support to be available from the NHS. They want guidelines finally to be produced by NICE, and they want GPs to be trained properly in diagnosing the condition.

Describing fibromyalgia as a very common illness Rob Wilson suggested fibromyalgia is in fact as common as rheumatoid arthritis and can be even more painful. A staggering number of people in the UK who suffer from fibromyalgia may not hold down a paying job or enjoy a social life.

Although the cause of fibromyalgia has yet to be found, he suggested the disease often develops after some sort of trauma that seems to act as a trigger, such as a fall or car accident, a viral infection, childbirth, an operation, a huge emotional event or without any obvious trigger. Research had identified a deficiency in serotonin in the central nervous system, with a resulting imbalance of substance P, a spinal fluid that transmits pain signals. The effect of that is disordered sensory processing. The brain registers pain when others might experience a slight ache or stiffness.

“We can only hope that research will discover the cause and result in more effective treatment in the years to come,” he added.

Discussing diagnosis Rob Wilson suggested it is difficult to identify the illness by standard laboratory tests or X-rays. Blood tests and scans will return a negative result and a patient will not necessarily look ill. Many of the symptoms are also found in chronic fatigue syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis and osteoporosis. It is not surprising that fibromyalgia has been dubbed ‘the invisible illness’.

“The problem comes when doctors do not have the experience or expertise to make a diagnosis. Nearly half of all specialists reported fibromyalgia as being ‘very or somewhat’ difficult to diagnose,” said the MP. “The average time taken for diagnosis is more than two years, and patients report seeing between two and four physicians before a diagnosis is reached. That lengthy period can be very worrying, frustrating and upsetting for patients.

“Despite the fact that several specialist fibromyalgia syndrome clinics are provided by NHS consultants around the UK, most of those do not appear in their own right on the NHS choose and book system. Even those GPs who know about the condition—and there are too few of those—who are looking for specialist help within the NHS cannot always refer patients directly to consultants with an interest in and knowledge of fibromyalgia. One of the immediate actions that the Minister could take today is to rectify the situation. Those clinics could be added to the ‘choose and book’ system, and the NHS could build and provide an extensive list of accepted specialist NHS services around the country.”

Currently fibromyalgia treatment reduces pain and improves sleep. Treatment focuses on the symptoms not the condition. The best that a doctor can do is give guidance on ways of coping with and treating some of the symptoms.

“I hope that it does not appear that I am criticising GPs, specialists or the NHS in general. That is not my purpose, as I believe that they do fantastic work under immense pressure; however, a major problem is that GPs get little or no training on the condition, and even consultant rheumatologists, who would usually diagnose fibromyalgia, often have little or no specific training. Professional development is currently hampered by out-of-date medical tests containing erroneous information. Much of the fibromyalgia information that is used by the NHS is provided by voluntary organisations such as the Fibromyalgia Association,” said Rob Wilson.

He pointed out that the NHS Direct online information had been brought up to date on fibromyalgia in 2008 by FibroAction, a charity supporting the syndrome.

Rob Wilson insisted, “It is clear that things need to change. Getting an accurate diagnosis is difficult, and about half of our GPs admit that the condition is often misdiagnosed. They highlight a lack of confidence in their ability to recognise the symptoms of fibromyalgia, or to differentiate the condition from others with similar symptoms. The problem does not rest with GPs alone. It is widespread in the medical profession. Education on the condition is urgently needed; the Government, through the NHS, could be the catalyst.”

Philip Hollobone MP said the NHS needs to provide as much help and support for GPs as possible. If it is difficult for specialists to identify the condition, it must be near to impossible for GPs.

Rob Wilson continued, “I also know that the Minister’s heart is in the right place, and that she is anxious for the NHS to help.”

He pointed out recent parliamentary questions from Members throughout the House have had a less than encouraging response. In June 2008, the Member for Twickenham (Dr. Cable) asked what plans the Department of Health had to improve treatment for people with fibromyalgia. The answer came, “There are no specific plans to improve the treatment for those living with fibromyalgia.”—[Official Report, 30 June 2008; Vol. 478, c. 655W.]

Another Member asked how many people were diagnosed in his constituency, the region and nationwide since 1997. The answer was: “Information on the number of people diagnosed with fibromyalgia is not collected.”—[Official Report, 21 November 2007; Vol. 467, c. 998W.]

He said, “Among other things, I asked the Minister what steps were being taken to raise awareness of fibromyalgia, and what progress there was on diagnosis and treatment. The response was: ‘We have made no assessment of the progress being made by the National Health Service into improving the diagnosis and treatment of fibromyalgia. We have taken no recent steps to raise the awareness of fibromyalgia among the general public and health professionals.’ ”—[Official Report, 9 October 2007; Vol. 464, c. 516W.]

Suggesting there is a discernible pattern Rob Wilson said there is clearly no focus on the illness in the Department, and no focus on it in the NHS, yet the condition acts as a significant drag on the economy. In 2006, through a parliamentary question, Rob Wilson discovered that 8,400 people who were claiming incapacity benefit or severe disablement had been given a primary diagnosis of fibromyalgia.

“We know that that is the tip of an iceberg, as most fibromyalgia sufferers on benefits will have been diagnosed with something else. The economic cost of the failure to diagnose the problem swiftly does not affect only the Department for Work and Pensions; the cost to the NHS and local authorities, too, will be huge. Better awareness and education of health professionals would considerably reduce that financial burden,” said Rob Wilson.

MPs paid tribute to the work of all local supports groups including Kettering Nene Valley support group.

Rob Wilson recognised the ongoing work of many groups that work tirelessly for the sufferers of the condition, and do their best to raise its profile but the message regularly comes back that there is a problem in raising the profile. Raising the profile of the condition is difficult without the support of the relevant authorities.

He spoke about an application made almost two years ago to National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). The aim was to establish clear guidelines on fibromyalgia.

“In May 2008, FMA UK had still not received a response, and asked me to intervene. Despite my intervention, still no response was received. Suddenly, and incredibly coincidentally, in the last couple days—since today’s debate was arranged—FMA UK has finally been contacted by NICE. FMA UK was informed that its application had been unsuccessful,” reported Rob Wilson.

“The fact that FMA UK has received an answer does not excuse the arrogance or incompetence—or both—that NICE has shown until now. Frankly, it is insulting and deeply frustrating for those who work tirelessly to raise the profile of the condition to have to wait for a debate such as today’s before the relevant authorities take them seriously. A delay of two years is not good enough,” he said.

It is imperative that a clear medical framework is set out for GPs. It is more than long overdue. Although he urged NICE to consider the matter again he requested the Minister to give fibromyalgia sufferers some hope by confirming that she will intervene, asking NICE to ensure a clear set of guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of the illness are approved?

On this he added, “It is not acceptable that NICE has only just acknowledged FMA UK’s application to provide a clear and unequivocal set of guidelines for GPs. Those guidelines could be used in the training of the medical profession and could reduce the stressful experience currently associated with diagnosis”.

It was suggested that many fibromyalgia sufferers look to the Department of Health for leadership and support. They were gratified that the chief medical officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, recognised the impact of fibromyalgia and its prevalence in the UK as a cause of chronic pain in his annual report of 2008.

Sir Liam’s annual report, published in March 2009, had said: “Chronic pain reduces the quality of life more than almost any other condition. The impact of pain on people’s lives is significant, bringing emotional and financial burdens to patients and loved ones. A major initiative to widen access to pain services is badly needed.” He stated that FM sufferers require information, and access to NHS tailored services.

Tribute was paid to Professor John Davies at Guys Hospital, the Russells Hall Hospital in Dudley, good multi-disciplinary teams at the Royal Bolton and Poole hospitals, and an eight-week course for fibromyalgia patients that is being run by southwest Essex community services in conjunction with Basildon University Hospital. Rob Wilson made reference to Lindsey Middlemass, the chair and founder of FibroAction and referred to her long struggle for a diagnosis and her work with NHS Direct and new guidelines.

In February 2005, Dr. Ernest Choy and Dr. Serena Carville, from King’s College London, produced a nine-point recommendation for the management and treatment of fibromyalgia. It is a credible report and is worth mentioning for that reason. Choy and Carville concluded that a full understanding of fibromyalgia requires an assessment of pain, function and the psychological impact on patients.

They also believe that individually tailored exercise programmes, including aerobic exercise and strength training, can be very beneficial, as well as other therapies, such as relaxation and physiotherapy. Relaxation works very well for almost everyone affected by this condition. It reduces tension in the mind and body and calms the symptoms, especially the pain. Choy and Carville concluded that, ultimately, medical professionals need to be able to listen to, and believe in, an individual’s experience of pain. Only then can a programme of treatment be established to reassure them and reduce stress and anxiety.

Asking the Minister to help those with fibromyalgia Rob Wilson suggested, “It is clear that we need to work towards providing greater education for general practitioners. It is unsatisfactory that many GPs are not confident or able to diagnose the illness in a timely fashion. Timely diagnosis is key to helping people with this condition. Secondly, it is not acceptable that NICE has only just acknowledged FMA UK’s application to provide a clear and unequivocal set of guidelines for GPs. Those guidelines could be used in the training of the medical profession and could reduce the stressful experience currently associated with diagnosis.

Martin Horwood MP said he was taken aback by some of the statistics that Rob Wilson gave, which were new to him. He felt there is the risk—this was the experience with drugs for dementia and other illnesses—that NICE will use the lack of a good evidence base as a reason for refusing to recommend treatment. Is that a risk, given some of the issues that mentioned, about credibility, belief and so on?

“We are looking not for advice on drugs, but for a set of guidelines so that people can be diagnosed quickly and GPs can properly understand their functions in this regard,” Rob Wilson said.

Effective treatment needs to be available throughout the country, but that should be signposted by the NHS, rather than third-party organisations. The profile of fibromyalgia desperately needs to be raised.

“As I mentioned before, despite its dedication, the voluntary sector can only do so much. We all have a part to play in raising awareness, but help from the Government is much needed. As we have seen, fibromyalgia is a complex condition with numerous contributing factors, and although research has advanced our understanding, it is clear that much work remains to be done.

“I know that the Minister has many pressures on her time and that there are also many pressures on the resources of the NHS. However, I know that she understands the chronic pain and suffering affecting millions of people throughout the UK and that she will do her utmost to provide assistance. I hope that today’s debate will help to raise the profile of this ‘invisible’ illness. That is the very least that I can do to help to support the many campaigners who have done their best to raise its profile,” added Rob Wilson.

Roger Williams MP said part of the problem for sufferers is that the condition takes so long to be recognised by the health services that they often come to believe that they are in some way responsible or guilty.

“They exhibit symptoms but are without the support necessary to bring some relief….. we have very little idea of what causes the condition—whether it is the genetic make-up of the individuals or an environmental aspect that they have experienced. Evidence is now being gathered relating the absence of serotonin to the symptoms of the disease. If that can be established, a much more profound and substantial method of treatment could be achieved. I have seen evidence that meeting other sufferers to discuss their experiences, symptoms and treatment can give individuals great confidence that there is a possibility that something can be achieved to alleviate their symptoms.

“The Minister would do well to take on board the comments made by the hon. Member for Reading, East and do what she can to ensure that the condition is recognised, that GPs diagnose it earlier than in the past and that provision is made for help through pain relief and encouraging good sleeping patterns, which make such a difference to the sufferers. I ask the Minister to take on board all those concerns,” said Roger Williams.

Norman Lamb suggested this was one of those occasions when all the parties can come together to make the case for improving awareness of fibromyalgia both among the public and the medical profession—particularly in primary care.

Fibromyalgia is something of a Cinderella condition. It is widely misunderstood and there is a great deal of ignorance about it, which has a significant impact on those who suffer from it. It is right to acknowledge fibromyalgia awareness day, which is on 12 May. It is a moment to concentrate minds and to focus the attention of the Department of Health, the National Health Service and NICE on a more effective approach to tackling the condition.

He said, “Sufferers often have a sense that no one believes them, especially when they have to apply for benefits because they cannot keep their employment. They feel that no one believes that the condition is disabling, so they are left utterly alone. It is a chronic condition, and one that applies particularly to women. Its impact on relationships, social lives and the capacity to work is substantial. It is often the case that conditions such as fibromyalgia, myalgic encephalomyelitis and chronic fatigue syndrome have a greater impact on people’s lives and their capacity to function as human beings, than many conditions that attract much greater attention in public discourse and in Parliament. It was a breakthrough when the Chief Medical Officer acknowledged the significance of the condition and made a clear plea for action to be taken…… a major initiative to widen access to pain services is badly needed.”

Norman Lamb continued, “It is hard to convince GPs and others that the problem is genuine. A newspaper article quoted Julia Fitzgerald, who, after eventually securing a diagnosis, was offered antidepressants. That was the medical profession’s response to her condition. Moreover, the fact that it takes between two and four clinicians to secure a diagnosis is simply unacceptable….. the priority must be to improve the training of GPs and other members of the medical profession, to ensure that when a patient presents with the condition they receive greater understanding. It is not good enough just to look at the training of new doctors coming through the system. We need to focus on continuing professional development for those who are already in post and who are all too often failing to give their patients an adequate or accurate diagnosis….. one cannot escape from the sense that the Department of Health has a lack of interest in the issue, so this is a good occasion for the Minister to reassure us that that is not the case.”

Following talk about getting the referral from primary care to a specialist centre right, Norman Lamb said the problem is not unique to fibromyalgia. Persuading the NHS to make the right referral can be a real challenge. Changing or adapting the ‘choose and book’ system to ensure that when any clinician across the country is faced with a patient with such a condition—or has the potential to suffer from it – they can point the patient to the right specialist centre wherever they live would be an enormous advance.

Returning to the role of NICE he said, “It is scandalous that it has managed to ignore for two years a clear request for guidance on the treatment of fibromyalgia. We hear that the application was unsuccessful. I now ask the Minister to engage with NICE?”

Ann Keen, (Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Health Services), Department of Health, replied that NICE was an independent body and Members had accepted the importance of that independence.

Norman Lamb accepted the absolute importance of the independence of NICE, but asked the Minister if she was able to request that it investigate a particular condition and consider providing guidance?

Ann Keen said the importance of NICE’s independence makes things difficult. But she was confident that the debate will assist in other ways.

Norman Lamb insisted a request would not challenge NICE’s independence—it is not an order. He asked would the Minister request NICE to investigate the possibility of preparing guidance on the treatment of fibromyalgia? That would be a very valuable step for her to take.

Bob Spink MP suggested NICE will be aware of political indifference in the House and prejudice in the NHS against what is a debilitating condition. Consequently, the Benefits Agency does not take the issue as seriously as it might, which disadvantages people with real, debilitating conditions who deserve better.

Norman Lamb recommended NICE could take from the debate a clear message that MPs want it to take the condition seriously and to come up with clear recommendations for its treatment. It was right to identify the importance of the Department for Work and Pensions taking the condition more seriously. There can be nothing worse for a person who is unable to work because they suffer from a debilitating condition than benefits officers not to accept or believe that the condition is serious. That has to be addressed.

He pointed out that pain management services are not part of the 18-weeks target and many people in the country are left waiting a scandalously long time for access to them. Given how debilitating the condition is, it is important that access to pain management is improved.

He quoted Sir Liam Donaldson’s recent annual report, “Chronic pain reduces the quality of life more than almost any other condition. The impact of pain on people’s lives is significant, bringing emotional and financial burdens to patients and their loved ones.”

Pointing out the impact of the condition on whole families Sir Liam had said, “A major initiative to widen access to pain services is badly needed.”

Norman Lamb suggested the Minister could provide enormous reassurance to those who suffer from the condition if she announced the clear initiative for which Sir Liam Donaldson has called.

Anne Milton MP Shadow Minister, Health, paid tribute to the FMA UK website and the variety information adding she was extremely impressed. She said the website also raised the difficulties of diagnosing and treating children, and the problem of education.

“The economic cost in terms of benefits is just one of the problems. I put together a flow chart of how someone with fibromyalgia might feel. It starts with pain—people do not know the origin of the pain—and goes on to reduced mobility and social isolation. The lack of diagnosis causes depression; people lose their employment and families break down. Both lead to reduced income. Furthermore, the impact on family, carers and friends is immense. Fibromyalgia and other undiagnosed chronic conditions take a significant toll on the spouses and children of the people who have them. In an ideal world, we would have increased awareness, early diagnosis and intervention, treatment, support and rehabilitation. That applies to fibromyalgia and many other chronic conditions,” she said.

The debate had done much to highlight the problems faced by fibromyalgia sufferers. The belated response from NICE, to which many Members referred, was not the answer they wanted, but it demonstrates that these debates are useful. They raise awareness and get the Minister’s attention – she has a significant brief.

“Sometimes, particularly at the moment, the House gets something of a knocking from the press and the public, but opportunities such as this debate are extremely important. They demonstrate that we can make a difference,” said Anne Milton.

She continued, “I hope that the Minister will confirm and re-establish that the Government take the condition seriously. Specifically, what steps is she taking to ensure that the training of doctors in particular includes a greater awareness of the significance of the signs and symptoms with which patients might present?

“As medical care and treatment become increasingly specialised, it is important that the Government take steps to ensure that GPs receive continuing professional education so that they can be confident in recognising and accessing treatment for such conditions. It involves not only GPs but all health care workers. The issue could also, in some instances, be addressed in schools. There has never been a greater need for awareness of the implications of signs and symptoms in the minds of the public sector workers who work with and meet the people affected.

“What specific plans does the Minister have for improving the treatment of fibromyalgia and access to secondary referral? I am sure that she will take steps to address that. Raising the profile and awareness of fibromyalgia among the groups that I mentioned is vital. Will she give the matter personal attention and demonstrate that the Government is aware that people with the syndrome are not getting the attention that they deserve, and will she take steps to ensure that attitudes from the Department of Health downwards change so that people get the care that they deserve and need?

“This is also a useful opportunity for the Minister to clarify the position of NICE. As she said, NICE is independent, which is extremely important. However, as I understand it, it works within a framework put together by the Government. Although we broadly welcome NICE’s independence and much of the work that it does, there are situations in which access to treatment regimes is not being made available by NICE. Response is slow. I am sure that she will take this opportunity to clarify those issues and demonstrate that she can do something to improve the lot of people with fibromyalgia,” said Anne Milton.

Ann Keen acknowledge that fibromyalgia had not discussed in the House before. She said she knew Rob Wilson had worked extremely hard to champion the cause of people living with fibromyalgia, not least as chair of the all-party parliamentary group on the condition.

“I am grateful to him for giving us the opportunity to debate it today. Every one of us wants the best for those suffering from that chronic, distressing, uncomfortable and painful condition,” said the Minister.

“I recognise how distressing fibromyalgia can be to those living with the condition and to their families, and I know that much of that distress is caused by difficulties recognising, acknowledging and accepting the condition and its impact. Like other chronic conditions, fibromyalgia can significantly affect physical and emotional well-being and disrupt work, social and family life.

“What can we do to raise the profile of fibromyalgia? I believe that this is the start of an important dialogue, particularly with the all-party group. I think that Members, particularly Front Benchers, recognise that setting NHS must-dos is not easy, as such things affect every one of us and every part of our bodies. The Department of Health must be sparing in setting those priorities centrally because of the criticism that we often receive when we attempt to do so. I know that everyone in this Chamber is here in good heart, but it is important to put it on the record that if we were to keep giving the NHS priorities, my list, let alone those of the rest of the ministerial team, would be long.

“The Department has set up the National Quality Board to advise Ministers what priorities the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence should adopt in setting NHS standards, as well as which conditions require the Department’s closer attention. The priorities are likely to be based on an objective assessment of the burden of disease and an analysis of the gap between the quality of existing services and best current practice. That is something that we can work with.

“Like other chronic conditions, fibromyalgia can significantly affect physical and emotional well-being, which in turn affects the social and financial economy of the family, the community and the country. Sadly, there is no cure, so treatment aims to ease symptoms as much as possible and improve patients’ quality of life. However, we all know that care for people with fibromyalgia varies widely, as has been demonstrated by Members today, particularly those representing rural areas. In the worst cases, people with the condition are left feeling that the health care system does not recognise their illness. I can understand why patients would feel that way. I acknowledge the points made today. The case has been made that better services, quicker diagnosis and better understanding can make a major difference to the quality of life of people with fibromyalgia. I want to respond as positively as I can to the issues raised.

“Let me be clear that we want to ensure that people with the condition live as well as possible. Their quality of life is important to all health professionals, particularly Ministers with responsibility for health. I pay tribute to the hard work and dedication of the voluntary sector in helping people with fibromyalgia, especially FibroAction and the Fibromyalgia Association UK. It is important to raise awareness among the medical profession and the public at large, and such organisations have been at the forefront of improving knowledge of this distressing condition.

“As a health professional, I know that it is unnerving to be faced with a patient who knows more about their condition than I do, but in these days of technology, the Internet provides access to wider knowledge and patients feel that they have more autonomy. To receive no response is thus even more frustrating. I totally acknowledge what has been said today, and I am confident that there are people present here who could enlighten us even further.

“There is comprehensive information on the care of people with fibromyalgia specifically for health professionals on NHS Evidence, which is the new web-based portal that provides all health and social care professionals with authoritative clinical and non-clinical evidence and best practice. It provides access to a range of information, including primary research literature, practical implementation tools, guidelines and policy documents,” she said.

The Minister continued, “The NHS Choices website provides information to help put patients in control of their health care. It contains a number of sections that deal with fibromyalgia. There is detailed information on diagnosis, treatment and on living with the condition. NHS Choices has launched a free training programme for health professionals to improve their understanding of all the features available on NHS Choices, including how to direct patients to local services and how to access NHS accredited information about healthy living and conditions.”

Norman Lamb asked the Minister if she would will she speak about ‘choose and book’? Patients can now make choices about where they go and doctors can advise them on what might be best. Will she explore whether the system can guide clinicians to the right specialist services, wherever they are in the country?

Ann Keen admitted this was a valid point. She said she believes that best practice happens in certain areas. As with any new initiative, some places take the reins quicker and more effectively than others.

“We are working towards that being addressed. Hon. Members have mentioned awareness of the condition among GPs and other health professionals. I am sure that all hon. Members are aware that the Department does not specify the content of training curricula. That is done by the royal colleges and is determined by regulatory requirements and the needs of the service. Nevertheless, we expect all health care staff to learn and to get the training and skills that they need to deal with all their patients. Obviously that includes those with fibromyalgia.”

Rob Wilson thanking the Minister for her replies so far said, “I am interested by the NHS Evidence web portal. I believe that it is for health professionals. Is it possible for members of the public or parliamentarians to look at what it advises general practitioners to do so that we have a clear view of the situation?”

Ann Keen said NHS Choices and NHS Evidence are certainly becoming more transparent and open.

“Although we cannot direct the curriculum, we expect all health care staff to get the training and skills that they need. Education and training for health care staff is, and always has been, a priority for the Department of Health. However, we accept that there is room for improvement. As will be obvious from Lord Darzi’s review of the NHS, we are looking at the content of curricula for undergraduate and postgraduate training in health and social care. That is important because of how long-term conditions will be treated in the community in future, as the hon. Member for Guildford (Anne Milton) said. We are looking at this matter, but we cannot dictate it.”

Anne Milton said she appreciated that the Government do not dictate the curricula, and asked, “Does the Minister not accept that there are issues, not only with fibromyalgia, but with many chronic conditions? There is an issue with GPs getting time off to do adequate training. Some GPs need training, but do not volunteer for it. There are issues for other health care staff and for nurses in particular. There can be problems with the ring-fencing of training budgets and with their use to cover shortfalls elsewhere. I am worried that we will slip backwards on training issues because NHS finances are quite tight. That would be a false economy. Money for continuing professional development is vital.”

Ann Keen replied, “That point was well made and it is well taken. The safety and quality that are required in the NHS cannot be provided, nor the professionalism of the health care team maintained, without the knowledge that is required. I am confident that it will be accepted that nurses are at the centre of that team and that they direct it.

“The transparency that we have asked for replaces ring-fencing and is much better than it. We will be able to see where the money is spent and whether education and training are given priority. The settlement for the NHS has been made up to 2010-11. We have always said that investment in education and training is paramount in everything we do, particularly at this difficult time. I should ask the Conservatives whether that investment will continue during the recession under their pledges on NHS funding. Some health professionals are not aware of conditions that may present at their practices in the way that they could and should be. We must correct that situation,” the Minister said.

Norman Lamb said he was grateful for the Minister’s generosity in continuing to give way and he understood that NHS Evidence was a new portal that was developed primarily by NICE. Given that NICE has been fairly unhelpful in its willingness to provide guidance on this condition, he asked if the Minister knew what NHS Evidence says about the treatment of this condition or what advice it gives to GPs? Should that be investigated to ensure that NHS Evidence is giving helpful guidance, he said?

Ann Keen replied that Lord Darzi’s review of the NHS will look at the content of the curricula for undergraduate and postgraduate training in health and social care. Fibromyalgia diagnosis and care will benefit from that work. She hoped that gave reassurance to Members and to sufferers.

“The hon. Member for Reading, East (Rob Wilson) will be aware that in 2003 the Chief Medical Officer issued a newsletter to all doctors in England to raise awareness of the condition and the extent to which it affects the population. We can send out such directives, but it is difficult to monitor how they are received. However, we know that it was well received by patients and health professionals. I have asked officials to look into the feasibility of reporting that exercise. We want to look at what has happened with that exercise since 2003, and to report back, and we are able to repeat that exercise easily, especially given what the Chief Medical Officer has said about pain, which has been acknowledged on both sides of the House today.

“Guidance has been mentioned, particularly the use of NICE guidance in securing improvements and reducing variations in the quality of care. As the hon. Gentleman and others have said, the Fibromyalgia Association UK has asked NICE, as part of its topic selection process, to consider developing clinical guidance on the diagnosis and management of fibromyalgia. Hon. Members have acknowledged the importance of NICE’s independence, but I have also been asked other questions. Both FMA UK and the hon. Gentleman have expressed concern at the slow progress in receiving a response from NICE, and I can confirm that the association has now been informed of the outcome of this topic. I have been asked whether I can intervene. Anyone can write to NICE with a request, but after matters are considered by the panel of experts, they are passed to Ministers for approval, so it is difficult for Ministers to intervene at the beginning of the process.

“In 2006, we launched the musculoskeletal services framework, which sets out guidance to provide high-quality and integrated services for people with musculoskeletal conditions, including fibromyalgia. The framework will help to improve the assessment and diagnosis of, and treatment for, fibromyalgia and other musculoskeletal conditions. It will encourage the giving of more support to help people to manage their own conditions, and it will get across better information and advice. It will also provide a clearer focus on the needs of children and families. The framework also supports an 18-week target for the time from referrals from GPs to the start of hospital treatment.

“Pain is a common, distressing and often disabling symptom in many musculoskeletal conditions, including fibromyalgia. The Department of Health has already supported the work of the NHS on the management of chronic pain through a number of important initiatives, including the musculoskeletal services framework, the 18-week commissioning pathway for the management and treatment of chronic pain, and the NHS Choices website. I must correct the hon. Member for North Norfolk (Norman Lamb) on one point: the development of the 18-week commissioning pathway for pain, in particular, assists commissioners in delivering the appropriate services for their populations. The pathway for chronic pain, which was developed with leading pain clinicians and with the consensus of a wide range of key stakeholders, will help to transform services with examples of good practice. It recommends the use of the brief pain inventory to assess the level and impact of pain, which is an important tool in assessing the patient,” the Minister added.

“I worked for many years as a community and district nurse, and I observed at first hand, when I told patients that their test results had come back negative, the guilt that they experienced for feeling pain when their test was negative. My practice, at all times, was to accept that the patient had the pain that they said they had. Those are the only criteria on which health professionals should operate. These issues are so mixed, especially when psychological aspects are taken into consideration. The fact that some patients are prescribed antidepressants, rather than analgesia, as has been mentioned, shows the need for pain to be managed differently, and I commend the Chief Medical Officer for his statement.

“I recently responded to an Adjournment debate in the main Chamber that had been secured by the chair of the all-party group on chronic pain, my hon. Friend the Member for Aberdeen, South (Miss Begg). I certainly think that the two all-party groups should talk together. On that evening, the chair was supported by the Chronic Pain Policy Coalition, and I met them at the end of the debate to say how important work on pain is. It should not be something that one puts up with; there is a limit. Pain is subjective, and it is important to have the correct measuring tools. I remember that one of the most distressing parts of my work as a practising nurse was to leave someone in pain without having an answer for them—that is no longer acceptable.

“Officials are currently scoping regional events to support the voluntary sector in influencing commissioners to provide better pain services locally, and to engage with professional bodies to raise awareness about chronic pain and about the needs of patients with chronic pain. The development and content of those events is being taken forward with the third sector, and I will ask officials to ensure that fibromyalgia groups are involved in that process. Once again, I thank the hon. Member for Reading, East for bringing this important issue to the attention of the House, and particularly for the manner in which he has done so.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: My apologies for the length of this report but it is almost a full transcript of the 75 minutes debate actioned by the chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Fibromyalgia, MP Rob Wilson. Said to be the first ever fibromyalgia debate in Parliament (Westminster Hall) this was a historic event which is why I have run the story at length.

I am sure you will recognise many things that have been said and it is good that the national organisation, FMA UK, has been acknowledged. Personally I feel without ‘gentle persuasion’ by Jean Turner, FMA UK Trustee, and Rob’s constituent, this might not have happened. Well done Jean T. You did a grand job. All we want now is some results.

It appeared to me that on the whole the Minister, as a health professional, had every sympathy with the requests for change and support for FMS. However I could not help but feel her hands were tied. For this reason we must keep up the pressure – raising awareness this week for May 12 International Fibromyalgia Awareness Day, and reminding our MPs who missed this debate even though you asked them to attend. This IS much work still to be done.

If you would like to see the 75 minute video, get a stiff drink, sit comfortably and log on to http://www.fibromyalgia-associationuk.org/content/view/385/1/

It would be good to hear your views about the debate? Email me at
jeannehambleton(@)mac.com.
Please omit the brackets – I am fighting the cyberspace robots.

My thanks to Hansard and TheyWorkForYou.com as the sources for this helpful information.


FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES SEE http://jeannehambleton77.wordpress.com

One in seven GPs may be told to retrain under revalidation plans

From the FMS Global News Desk of Jeanne Hambleton (UK)

Courtesy of PulseToday.com

On July 2008 the PulseToday.com on line magazine for GPs carried a story concerning compulsory annual assessment for GPs.

Chief Medical Officer Sir Liam Donaldson then formally laid out controversial plans for the revalidation of doctors.

Under the plans, revealed in the report, Medical Revalidation: Principle and Next Steps, GPs will face compulsory annual assessments, and could have their licenses removed if they are judged to be performing poorly.

The process, which has been in the pipeline for over a decade, will require GPs to renew their licenses every five years, with senior doctors asked to assess colleagues who are practicing in their area to ensure they are not putting patients at risk.

Patient feedback will also be used in the assessment process, pilots of which will start next year.

The proposals have been produced by the GMC with the help of the medical colleges, including the RCGP. But critics have warned that the extra scrutiny could lead to the spread of defensive medicine.

GPs will have to clear two hurdles to gain revalidation; recertification – to confirm that they meet standards appropriate for the specialty of their medicine, and re-licensure – to confirm that they practise in accordance with the GMC’s generic standards.

Mandatory annual reviews will look at prescribing habits, assessment of a patient’s condition and any personal issues such drug or alcohol abuse.

Pulse revealed earlier this year that GPs will be assessed using so-called 360-degree colleague surveys, with up to a dozen practice staff and colleagues asked to rate their performance.

The process is expected to be rolled out gradually to all specialities, including general practice, with pilots beginning in 2009.

UP DATE

Last week on 16 April 2009 Gareth Iacobucci wrote an up to datge story for PulseToday.com.

Exclusive: As many as one GP in seven will face having to retrain under the RCGP’s (Royal College of General Practitioners) plans for revalidation, Pulse can reveal.

LMCs (Local Medical Committees) have been told to expect between 5% and 14% of all GPs will fail at least one element of the programme, with some having to do up to 18 months of ‘corrective training’.

The figures, which the college said were in line with its own predictions, could mean up to a third of three-partner practices, and almost half of four-partner practices, having at least one GP who does not pass first time.


Dr Maurice Conlon
, national director of the NHS Revalidation Support Team and a GP in Birmingham, told Pulse practices might need to consider rewriting partnership agreements to outline who was financially liable if a partner had to take time out of work to retrain. He said he expected a ‘surge’ of GPs to need some sort of intervention in the first year or two of revalidation, but insisted this would then ‘settle down and tail off’.

He added: ‘A very small number of doctors might find they are in the wrong job, some will have a significant need for remediation and some will need some form of retraining.’

The RCGP expects GPs to begin compiling portfolios from this month for the first five-year revalidation cycle, with the first GPs scheduled to move through the system in 2010/11.

Professor Steve Field, chair of the college, said the 5-14% estimate was ‘about right’, but that most struggling GPs should be identified via PCT appraisals long before the end of the five-year cycle:

‘Learning needs should be identified each year and additional support given. But nothing will work unless we have effective appraisal.’

Dr Conlon said many GPs requiring retraining would still be fit to practise, depending on how much work was needed, with revalidation targeting areas such as communication problems, absence of an established practice team and lack of engagement with CPD

(Editor’s Note: Doctors have a responsibility to keep up to date. The GMC publishes Guidance on Continuing Professional Development, which sets out the principles on which continuous professional development should be based, and the roles of the relevant organisations involved in its delivery.)

But Dr Conlon warned that GPs might have to fund some retraining themselves if it extended beyond study leave written into their contracts. “Partners could choose to write into agreements that if you run into difficulty, you limit their ability to share profits. I would be very disappointed to see that,” he said.

Kent LMC has begun warning its members of the ‘significant’ effort and cost likely to be involved, after being presented with the failure-rate figures at a meeting between GP educationalists and local PCT managers.

Dr Gary Calver, secretary of Kent LMC, said: “There are big question marks over how it is going to work and be funded.”

Gloucestershire LMC warned: “Partnerships should consider very carefully and put into partnership agreements what is to occur should a partner fail. For instance, would the partnership continue to pay the GP a share of profits while retraining?”

The GPC has stressed the need to ensure all aspects of revalidation, appraisal and remediation are adequately supported, but the Department of Health has given no guarantees.

PULSE READERS’ COMMENTS:

Umesh Prabhu | 18 Apr 09

If the plan is to retrain ‘poorly performing’ GPs then there is no need to worry. The question is how we are going to identify these GPs? Who makes the decision that the GP needs re-training? Who is going to fund it? How do we make sure that there are no ‘hidden’ or personal agendas at local PCT?

Of course, it is important to protect patient safety and their well-being but it is equally important that all doctors are treated fairly and correctly and action taken is proportionate. Big question is who is going to fund the re-training?

THE REVALIDATION PROCESS

Areas where GPs could fail
GPs may demonstrate deficiencies in areas such as communication, poor premises or CPD.

What type of retraining?
GPs could receive educational support from the RCGP, deaneries or other specialised academics for those that need ‘more intensive support’. With significant concerns, and if remediation is required, National Clinical Assessment Services procedures could be used, which can last up to 18 months.

The process
GPs to collect information for revalidation portfolios over five-year period. PCT responsible officers will give a recommendation to the GMC over whether or not to revalidate


Practice staff to rate GPs as part of tougher appraisal

GPs will be scored by colleagues and staff every few years as part of a new process to prove they are qualified to continue practising, said Gareth Iacobucci in Pulse Today.

Verdicts from colleagues form a key part of controversial plans for recertification and will take place either once or twice every five years.

GPs will be assessed using so-called 360-degree surveys, with up to a dozen practice staff and colleagues asked to rate their performance.

Annual appraisal will also be toughened up under the plans, released to Pulse, by the Royal College of General Practitioners’. The current informal appraisal will be replaced by summative assessment and performance management.

The more rigorous appraisals and 360-degree surveys – both of which are bound to be contentious – will feed into the five-yearly recertification process.

Recertification will require GPs to demonstrate the skills and knowledge expected of their profession, and will occur in parallel to the GMC’s relicensure procedures to investigate fitness to practise. GPs will need to clear both hurdles in order to gain revalidation.

The RCGP told Pulse toughening up appraisals was essential to meet the regulatory requirements expected of the profession and ensure it could continue to self-regulate.

The college’s chair, Professor Steve Field, insisted most GPs had nothing to fear: “This is about professional development in the vast majority and, in cases where performance is below standard, identifying those in need of help.”

The college will publish a draft of ‘criteria standards and evidence’ to guide appraisers in judging GP performance. GPs will be judged on the quantity and quality of their portfolio, and expected to detail difficult incidents and lessons learned.

Professor Mike Pringle, professor of primary care at the University of Nottingham, who led the RCGP group examining the criteria to be applied in appraisals, said GPs should feel reassured that they would be judged by peers, not external bodies, during recertification.

“People will sit at a computer, and anonymously rate the GP on a five-point scale on a set of attributes. GPs get an aggregated score so they can see how colleagues view them,” he said .

But some GPs were alarmed by the plans. Dr Cornel Fleming, a GP in Islington in north London, said the system would breed discontent among GPs.

“It is getting ridiculous,” he said. “Appraisals were supposed to be helpful, not disciplinary. It is becoming like a police state.”

The RCGP said detailed proposals would be completed later this year, piloted in 2009 and rolled out in 2010. Appraisals will remain annual, but it is yet to be decided how often surveys will take place over five years.

In the surveys GPs would be ranked by colleagues of their choice, which could include fellow GPs within or outside the practice, practice nurses and practice managers.

Pulse, CMP Medica. All rights reserved.
(http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=23&storycode=4122447&c=2)

(http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=4118102)


DEBATE

Are recertification plans good for general practice?

The RCGP’s Professor Mike Pringle insists the system will be fair and transparent. But GMC member Dr Krishna Korlipara believes assessment by staff is an inappropriate way of judging clinical competence.

Yes

Are recertification and revalidation really necessary?

Well, my view is that it is no longer sufficient to qualify as a doctor and to pass the MRCGP before, say, the age of 30, and then to practise through to 65 or older with no further question about your competency.

We could rely, as we have in the past, on dodgy doctors ‘coming to light’ through complaints or PCT investigations, but that is not sufficient reassurance to us as colleagues or to the public.

So if periodically demonstrating that we are keeping up to date and still fit to practise is necessary, we need to be sure that the system imposed on us is appropriate.

By this I mean that it achieves its aims of ensuring our fitness, and being fair, transparent and feasible.

The first step is to agree what we mean by an acceptable GP, and this is the purpose of the RCGP’s Good Medical Practice for General Practitioners.

The college is asking for your views on the new draft of this at present. The second step is to say what tests will be applied, to what level, and how doctors will demonstrate their compliance.

This is the purpose of a document called Criteria, Standards and Evidence that is being worked up. When it is published, every GP and member of the public will see clearly what is expected.

What follows in this article is a personal view based on the early thinking for Criteria, Standards and Evidence. Whatever the college proposes will be put out for consultation and tested in pilots.

The plans will have to be approved by the GMC, which will want to be sure the college’s plans are fit for purpose and equivalent to those for other types of doctors.

Much of the evidence will be already available to most GPs. It will come through their appraisals, their audits – including significant events – their patient surveys and clinical governance.

Standard process

A new method of measuring continuing professional development is likely to form part of the package. One new element is likely to be multi-source feedback – asking your colleagues to rate you. It is a fairly standard process and such surveys are already part of regular appraisal at the GMC.

“We can design a process that is fair, fit for purpose and transparent”

At each annual appraisal GPs will be asked to share the evidence they are gathering. The appraiser will check both its quantity (is it enough for this phase in the five-year cycle?) and its quality (does it show good enough care?).

If it is insufficient, the appraiser will advise on how to improve it. At each appraisal GPs will plan what to put in the folder for the next year.

At the end of the five-year cycle, GPs will submit the folder of evidence containing enough for relicensure (continuing to be a doctor) and recertification (continuing to be a GP). There will be local sign-off from the PCT and appraiser.

If the folder meets the standards in Criteria, Standards and Evidence, the college will recommend you to the GMC.

As a five-year exercise, this sounds doable, but that will be tested through pilots – as will its effectiveness in sorting the vast majority who are good GPs from the few who are not. If the college cannot recommend a GP for recertification, there is no immediate effect.

The GMC would need to review the evidence and, if necessary, start fitness-to-practise processes. So for the few, the case that they are unacceptable GPs must be proven.

I believe we can design and implement a recertification process that is fair, fit for purpose, transparent and which is not too bureaucratic. I hope all GPs will look out for and comment on the college’s proposals.

The eventual system should be what you decide will be best for GPs and patients.

Professor Pringle is a council member of the RCGP, a member of the RCGP stakeholder group on recertification and a GMC council member

No

Under the current proposals for revalidation, all GPs need to be recertified every five years by the RCGP, in addition to annual appraisals by their local colleagues.

In order to be acceptable to the GMC for purposes of relicensure and revalidation, appraisals are to be based on seven Good Medical Practice criteria – good clinical care, maintaining good medical knowledge, teaching and training, surveys from patient questionnaires, peer questionnaires, probity, and health.

Based on satisfactory outcomes, doctors can expect to be given relicensure.

But the RCGP’s proposals for recertification go further. They rely on feedback from not just one’s peers, but also from nurses, managers and presumably other members of the healthcare team such as medical secretaries, health visitors and social workers.

“The views of staff are subjective and carry the risk of personal bias”

These proposals are seriously flawed in many respects.

Recertification, to be fair and fit for purpose, should be based not on third-party opinions but on an assessment of a GP’s knowledge and skills.

Such assessment should be measured by evidence of their participation in educational activities, the lessons learned from such activities, and an audit of disease management in different clinical areas – such as diabetes, coronary artery disease and COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ).

The remit of the RCGP is to come up with the criteria, standards and evidence needed to make a good doctor, to guide the appraisers, but not to take over the functions of the GMC, which has the sole responsibility for relicensing and revalidating doctors.

Patient and peer questionnaires can be a valuable tool for revalidation, and should be administered every five years as part of the revalidation process, which is a function of the GMC, not of the Royal College.

Information gathered from surveys of patient questionnaires selected at random can give valuable insight into the listening and communication skills of the doctor and can inform the revalidation process.

Peer questionnaires could also be used for revalidation, specifically to gather a cross-section of opinion from medical colleagues on a doctor’s qualities as a team member, referral patterns and adverse incidents.

But such questionnaires are not appropriate for recertification, which is all about assessment of knowledge and skills, rather than an assessment of a doctor’s continuing fitness to practise.

Wary of bias

We should also be wary of the dangers of seeking feedback from nurses and other members of the primary healthcare team, who may find themselves in an invidious position of either saying all the right things about a doctor with whom they have to work, for fear of offending, or saying things which are not strictly true based on mutual dislike.

Either way these views are unreliable and should not be used even for appraisals. They are too subjective to be of any real value and carry the risk of personal bias.

Doctors have hitherto been led to believe that appraisals will be formative rather than summative, and supportive rather than punitive, so that an appraisee can confidently and confidentially cooperate with the appraiser, knowing that the whole exercise is meant to help the candidate to learn from identified gaps in knowledge.

To retain the confidence of all doctors, appraisals should remain formative and supportive, with the sole exception of cases where a doctor’s performance is found to be so deficient that their continued practice could be a danger to patients.

In such cases – but only in such cases – an appraiser should be bound to share their concerns with the employer. But any more onerous system of appraisal could become a threat to thousands of doctors.

Dr Korlipara is an elected member of the GMC and former chair of the GP consultative group on revalidation


Pulse, CMP Medica. All rights reserved
(http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=4118904)

FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES SEE http://jeannehambleton77.wordpress.com

Prescriptions for opioids jump following co-proxamol ban

From the FMS Global News Desk of Jeanne Hambleton

Courtesy PulseToday.co.uk.

By Lilian Anekwe – 17 March 2009

Opioid prescriptions have jumped during the withdrawal of co-proxamol, with GPs apparently struggling to find adequate means of pain control for some patients.

Prescriptions for morphine have risen by more than 40% and those for tramadol by two-thirds since co-proxamol use was first reduced in anticipation of the drug’s withdrawal.

An analysis for the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, obtained by Pulse under the Freedom of Information Act, reveals prescriptions for co-proxamol plummeted from 835 million in 2004 – the year prior to legislation on its withdrawal – to 121 million in 2007.

But over the same period, opiod prescriptions overall rose by 40%. Prescriptions for morphine rose by 44%, from 757,000 in 2004 to 1,093,000 in 2007, and tramadol prescriptions increased by 61%, from 3,130,000 to 5,036,000.

Co-proxamol was removed from the British National Formulary on 1 January last year, but the NHS Information Centre analysis shows GPs continued to prescribe co-proxamol to approximately 150,000 patients in England on a named-patient basis.

The MHRA downplayed the impact of the withdrawal and said the ageing population was to blame for increasing demand for analgesics. But the agency’s pharmacovigilance group concluded: ‘Opioids, especially tramadol, have followed an increasing trend and some patients may have been switched to this class of analgesic.’

Dr Adam Bajkowski, a GP in Wigan and president of the primary care rheumatology society, said the analysis suggested the MHRA’s argument that full-strength paracetamol was as effective as co-proxamol was flawed: ‘If GPs are having to switch patients to a stronger opioid, then it suggests the MHRA’s reasoning wasn’t really true.’

READERS’ COMMENTS
MHRA | 20 Mar 09
Your report on analgesic prescribing following the withdrawal of co-proxamol presented a distorted picture of the relevant information.

The withdrawal of co-proxamol in the UK has saved approximately 300 lives per year and there is no evidence that the death rate due to other analgesics is increasing. Prior to the withdrawal of co-proxamol, the MHRA issued guidance on pain management from the former Committee on Safety of Medicines (now known as the Commission on Human Medicines) to help doctors find the best options for individual patients, setting out a graduated range of possible therapeutic interventions.

Opioid prescriptions have not “jumped” during the three-year phased withdrawal of co-proxamol, as suggested in the article, and we do not have evidence that patients are being switched from co-proxamol to other opioids. Even though opioid prescriptions have increased steadily over the last 5 years they still make up a very small proportion of the overall prescriptions for painkillers.

There were increases in the numbers of prescriptions of paracetamol and of co-codamol around the time of the co-proxamol withdrawal. These increases were sufficiently large to suggest that patients may have been switched from co-proxamol. A research project to look at the analgesics that patients have been switched to will be started shortly.

Pulse, CMP Medica. All rights reserved.
(http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=23&storycode=4122142&c=2)

EDITOR’S NOTE As someone who suffers with pain 24/7 from fibromyalgia, I managed very nicely with co-proxamol and some pain killing gel for the aches and pains until the withdrawal on December 31 2007. We were promised that those who really could not manage without it would be prescribed on a named patient basis. The Government and the Ministers failed to mention the under handed action of making co-proxamol an ‘illegal’ drug.

After I fought my own personal battle to reverse the withdrawal and tried to become a named patient, all unsuccessfully, I tried the alternatives which aggravated the old IBS. So I am left with nothing but pain. My GP will not prescribe co-proxamol for fear of litigation and I do not want to fill my body with drugs where the side effects for me are unbearable.

Why was co-proxamol not listed as a controlled drug. Those in need could then have received the pain relief they need so badly.

I imagine with the increase in these alternative medications mentioned in the article above, the cost of pain treatments has soared against what was a relatively cheap pain killer – £2.79 for 100 tablets – before the Government got involved. Is it any wonder the NHS is always short of funds and this is just a small example of failure to see the whole picture.

Why did GPs stop prescribing co-proxamol read this article from Pulse just after the withdrawal on 17 January 2008.

PCTs threaten GPs over co-proxamol

By Nigel Praities – 17 Jan 2008

PCTs are piling pressure on GPs to switch patients from co-proxamol to alternative medication, after the reimbursement price of the drug soared with loss of its licence.

In December 2007, co-proxamol was listed as Category M medicine with a reimbursement price of £2.79 for 100 tablets. From January 2008 it has been available as an unlicensed drug, but has been changed to Category C with a reimbursement price of £20.36 for 100 tablets – a sevenfold increase in price.

The price hike has galvanised trusts into action, with several already having contacted GPs to urge them to prescribe alternative analgesics, just weeks into the new year.

West Essex, Islington and West Hertfordshire PCTs are all planning, or have already, written to GPs about the price increase.

Norfolk PCT is planning a series of meetings and individual visits to reinforce the status and cost of co-proxamol to GPs. Other PCTs have indicated to Pulse that they are monitoring the situation in their area before taking action.

Dr Iain Gilchrist, a GP in Essex and treasurer of the Primary Care Rheumatology Society, who has taken all his patients on co-proxamol off the drug, said the price increase would put even more pressure on those GPs still prescribing it.

‘No doubt with GPs who still have patients on co-proxamol, the prescribing advisors will be wanting to have a little word in their ear. There is nothing like a price hike to concentrate the mind,’ Dr Gilchrist said.

Dr Gilchrist received an email in early January from a prescribing adviser at West Essex PCT, which said the price of co-proxamol had ‘rocketed’ and is a ‘very expensive option, as well as being unlicensed.’

PCTs are worried about the cost implications as many practices have struggled to find alternatives for many of their patients on the drug. A Pulse investigation in December revealed as many as 60,000 patients may still be on co-proxamol and 60% of practices reported that a hard core of their patients continued to take it.

The latest pressure from PCTs adds to the medico-legal headache surrounding co-proxamol. Patients can still be prescribed the drug on a named-patient basis, although GPs assume legal liability if they continue to prescribe the unlicensed drug.

TROUBLED WITHDRAWAL OF CO-PROXAMOL

Jan 2005 – MHRA announces withdrawal of co-proxamol
Oct 2006 – A Pulse survey reveals 70% of GPs demand the MHRA review its decision
Jan 2007 – MPs demand u-turn on withdrawal at special House of Commons debate
Oct 2007 – 60,000 patients remain on co-proxamol
Dec 2007 – Final withdrawal of co-proxamol
Jan 2008 – PCTs panic as price of co-proxamol soars

(http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=4116799)

On 21 September 2006

One GP asked, “Is it time for a rethink on the co-proxamol ban?”

Co-proxamol is so accessible because it is the most useful analgesic in general practice and so a lot has been prescribed.

The academics who recommended banning it have made a kneejerk reaction without listening to those of us facing the realities at the coalface of medicine. All the alternatives, including paracetemol itself, are more toxic than co- proxamol. Tablet for tablet, they all have more paracetemol than co-proxamol. Dextropropoxyphene is not toxic to the liver. Paracetemol, co- codamol and co-dydramol are all readily available, more toxic and more expensive than co-proxamol, tramadol and so on.

Prescriptions will increase. More bleeds, more deaths and more drug interactions will occur. There will be more prescriptions for laxatives, more bowel obstructions, more hospitalisations. Drug costs will go up substantially and more successful suicides will occur.

I plead – think again. What do other GPs think?

(http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=4010484)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Just this week a member of my own family haas been hospitalised for 36 hours. The hospital doctors blamed the medication (pain killers) prescribed for broken bones. He was lucky to be diagnosed quickly or the complication might have been fatal. Afraid to take more medication he is living with unbearable pain. If he had been taking co-proxamol I doubt this would have happened. I literally ‘lived’ on co-proxamol for almost five months when I broke my wrist and my pelvic bone in three places – without any side effects.

So what do you think? Are you ready to press your MP to ask questions in the House to have co-proxamol licensed as a controlled drug?

What Makes a Disease Real?

From the FMS Global News Desk of Jeanne Hambleton

Contents provided by the Harvard Medicine School – Courtesy MSN.health&fitness

Some conditions cannot be diagnosed with any test
By Robert Shmerling, M.D., Harvard Health Publications

Doctors can be a skeptical bunch. I have colleagues who flat out deny that a condition can be “real” unless they can observe it or detect it with a test.

Yet, many physicians deal with conditions all the time whose symptoms can’t be measured. For example:

Depression—A depressed person will usually have normal physical examinations, blood tests and, if necessary, a normal brain MRI.
Headaches—Most people who have headaches have normal test results.
Joint pain—People can have joint pain (arthralgia) without any joint inflammation (arthritis). The pain could be due to tendonitis, bursitis, vitamin D deficiency or thyroid disease. But often we can’t find any cause of the pain.

Doctors rarely do extensive testing for these conditions because abnormal results are rare and the tests are almost never helpful.

Millions of people are affected by diseases that have “subjective” symptoms and cannot be confirmed by observation or tests. These include fibromyalgia, most headaches (including migraine), irritable bowel syndrome. So, does this mean that these conditions aren’t “real?” They’re certainly real to the people suffering with them.

“It is all in your head”.

When a symptom cannot be explained, it does not mean that it is imaginary or due to a mental illness, psychiatric disorder or psychological distress. That is what is implied when a doctor tells a patient, “It’s all in your head.” At the very least, we should assume that the pain or unpleasant experience is real regardless of test results.

In the end, all pain is perceived by the brain. So, in a way, all pain is “all in your head.” Yet there is a tendency to relegate unobservable symptoms to the realm of the psychiatrist. Never mind that a psychiatric disease is “real” even when imaging and blood test results are normal. If you have ever witnessed psychotic behavior or been with someone who is severely depressed, it is clearly real.

Unexplained symptoms could be due to a disease that has not been detected yet. Ideally, doctors and patients should identify the cause if possible, rule out a dangerous condition, and treat the bothersome symptoms. And that is true whether the symptom is measureable or not.

What is in a name?

We usually expect the doctor to make a diagnosis and recommend a treatment when we have a problem. It is reassuring to know that your particular problem has a name. It means that other people have experienced it and that studies have assessed the effectiveness of various treatments.

Yet for many conditions, the name is only a label. It is convenient to apply a name to a particular combination of symptoms, even though the cause is unknown and no clear-cut abnormalities can be found. Examples include fibromyalgia syndrome and irritable bowel syndrome. Assigning a name to symptoms can be reassuring but it does not make the condition more or less “real.”


Focus on improving symptoms

There are times when even the smartest health care provider cannot come up with a logical, compelling or even reasonable explanation for a person’s symptoms. In those cases, it is important not to get too focused on explaining or labeling them. Instead, the doctor should focus on:

Not missing some important clue

Treating the symptoms

In many fields of medicine, doctors spend all day improving symptoms rather than making a diagnosis. Headache specialists, for example, must be convinced there is no brain tumor, no meningitis, and no other serious and treatable cause of the pain. But once that happens, attention turns toward treatment rather than on sorting out a specific cause.

This can be frustrating for both patients and doctors. But until we understand the specific causes of common conditions like headaches, back pain, ringing in the ears (tinnitus) and chronic fatigue, controlling symptoms, not a name, is what will help the most.

The bottom line

Once again this shows that there is more uncertainty in medicine than most people think. But that does not mean a person is imagining their symptoms.

As I see it, debating the “realness” of symptoms is often a waste of time. Unless a person is deliberately “faking” symptoms (a rare event in most doctors’ practices), they are just as real as for those with an observable, measurable and testable condition.

Having names are nice, but they are not always helpful. All other things being equal, I would rather have a nameless condition that is well-treated than a definite, but untreatable diagnosis.

Copyright © 2009 by the Presidents and Fellows of Harvard College. Used with permission of StayWell. All rights reserved. Harvard Medical School does not approve or endorse any products on the page. Harvard is the sole creator of its editorial content, and advertisers are not allowed to influence the language or images Harvard uses.

(http://health.msn.com/health-topics/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=100233740)

CO-PROXAMOL – A CONTROLLED DRUG?

By Jeanne Hambleton © 2009

From the Fibromyalgia FMS Global News Desk

See LATEST NEWS at end of post….

Yes folk are still writing about co-proxamol and asking why they cannot buy it – what has happened to it – and that they need it for their pain. Paul who wrote to me today asked me if the Save Coproxamol Forum has folded? He could not find it and neither can I? Any ideas? Who will start a new one? Who will start an e-petition? Let me know and we will share it for support.

As a quick resume for those who are wondering where this great painkiller has gone – the Government withdrew it on the advice of their medical advisers at the end of 2007. The reason given was some folk had found it worked for suicides.

The sad thing about this whole situation is that thousands of people who are still in pain and suffering, have been deprived ‘at the a stroke of a pen’ of co-proxamol which they had been taking safely for years,

In the last 14 months we, yes me included as my doctor will not prescribe co-proxamol, have finally used up the little stock pile of tablets we had saved knowing the end was nigh. Now folk are back in pain and want the Government to make co-proxamol a controlled drug. What is a controlled drug – I have included an extract below.

Briefly controlled means they have stricter legal controls on their supply to prevent them being obtained illegally.

Also you must show ID when collecting your prescription – a small price to pay.


WITHDRAWAL OF CO-PROXAMOL

At the time of the withdrawal the number of suicides involving co-proxamol was blamed but we were not told what percentage of the total number that represented. So if a larger percentage of those taking their own lives found other ways of solving their problems, this does warrant further discussion.

The reason co-proxamol is not available today to those who need it, although the Government promised co-proxamol could be prescribed on a named person basis to responsible people, is because the drug was taken off the prescribing list leaving it as an ‘illegal’ drug. This meant the family of a patient who overdosed on co-proxamol could take legal action against the prescribing doctor. How many doctors would take that risk? Not many.

While I and many others having every sympathy of those who take their own lives by any means including using co-proxamol, the Government’s failure to make co-proxamol a controlled drug left thousands of people in pain and deprived of ‘an old friend’ – a painkiller they could trust to give them some relief. It also drove a ‘coach and horses’ through all the promises made in Parliament.

I even offered to sign a letter accepting full responsibility for the safe use of co-proxamol tablets if my doctor would just prescribe more magic painkillers for me. He said the letter would not be acceptable in a court of law.

ALL GONE

So it has been just over a year since the last ‘legal’ prescriptions for this wonder tablet were written, with the exception of those few doctors courageous enough to trust their patients and disregard the directions about litigation. These are doctors who believed the pain of their patient was a paramount consideration and trusted those who were suffering.

Although the GPs would have us believe these ‘other’ tablets are as good and are better for us, they do not work for me and apparently not for many other people.

Here is the proof – received this week from Shirley Johnson who wrote, “I have not been allowed to have co-proxamol since its ban, and have now used almost all my reserves (allowing myself only to take one when ‘desperate’). I now have four left! No other product has been as good as this.”

YOUR VIEWS

Only last week I received an email about the withdrawal of co-proxamol tablets from a lady called Menna. She told me, “My husband is nearly 65 years old and has suffered from chronic pain for many years. He had always found that co-proxamol is the only medicine, which helped him. All other medicines he tried were showing very strong and adverse side effects. It is shame that the doctors, in spite of knowing that my husband does not misuse any drug and does not take alcohol, have stopped prescribing this wonderful life saving medicine.

“Now my husband suffers from nausea, headache, dizziness, constipation and vertigo, because he tries other pain killers. I wish this medicine could be made a Controlled Drug so it would be prescribed by doctors again.”

I am sure you will find it interesting to read at the end of this post exactly what a controlled medicine is – courtesy of the NHS……..

Elizabeth wrote to me at the end of December and said, “I suffer from degenerative disc disease and arthritis and have tried all the alternative pain-killers offered to me after my doctor refused to prescribe co-proxamol. Some were useless, most had unwelcome side effects. I am in constant pain. I have written to the Health Minister in the Scottish Parliament, who came out with the standard response. 
 My doctor sympathises and has advised me to purchase the drug in Spain (I have a property there). On my last visit I enquired about co-proxamol, but they did not have it listed. A visit to the GP resulted in me receiving a drug, which he said was co-proxamol, but it did not look like the pill I was familiar with. Does co-proxamol have a different name in Spain? 
Meanwhile I have to use a wheelchair, can anyone help?


I am advised in Europe co-proxamol is sometimes called distalgesic. I must have been taking this tablets for so long that I remember having boxes of distalgesic tablets.

Mr. H. Dacey said, “My wife and I were taking co-proxamol over a ten year period, she has arthritis and I have a shrapnel wound. In 2007 when it was announced that it was being withdrawn our doctor stopped prescribing straightaway, despite being reminded about the phased withdrawal. All other medication has proved ineffective with well documented side effects. I doubt very much if our G P would prescribe it under any circumstances, and they have some arrangement which makes it difficult to change GPs.”

June told me, “I admire your efforts and duly signed PEG Cope’s petition, but was disappointed at how few had signed! However, I wonder if all the names signed up are being added? When I went back to the site later in the day, my name had disappeared! I emailed the webmaster, and it miraculously reappeared!! There is a terrible rip-off on the Internet for co-proxamol. I just hope the tablets are pure and not harmful! I am one of the few lucky ones whose GP still prescribes for me. Best wishes, June.”

Lori responding to the co-proxamol withdrawal debate told me, “I have compassion for your desire to help so many people who are afflicted with so much pain. I have the same desire. But I have a very different orientation towards solving the pain problem. I am in the U.S. and just responded to the ‘call’ to use the drug Lyrica by ABCNews4. I will enclose my response and their link for information purposes.

“I am wondering why Jill Atwood is a spokesperson for the pharmaceutical industry, under the guise of factual reporting, summarily dismisses herbal and alternative remedies for fibromyalgia found on the web ‘if they are for profit’. What may I ask are the drug companies in it for? Charity? She concludes – ‘Ask your doctor’ – who is from the very same community that could not find anything wrong.

Suddenly everything is changed because a drug from big business is available? I am not disputing whether this drug helps some people but didn’t she off handedly mention a minor detail aka. ‘side effects’? Also, she failed to mention that this drug is simply treating the symptoms and does not address the root cause of fibromyalgia.

Isn’t this so typical? Find a drug with lots of side effects that treats the symptoms and forget about the source of the problem? I suggest that we all wonder just why are there millions of people suffering so? I would also ask why is it that so many different remedies get some results? What is the common thing they all address – I have looked into it and they all reduce stress (nutrition, massage, exercise etc.)

I know someone who has great success in eliminating fibromyalgia pain for people – but his message will never be heard when reporters brainwash people into believing that the only legitimate way to treat a problem is through the medical community and with drugs.

Unfortunately, the website where the News 4 article and video are shown does not allow any feedback.

http://www.abc4.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=a9c6a76a-8d13-4d05-a170-ae9e4d651468

NATURAL MEDICINE

Mark Conrad the MD of NutriVital at Petersfield in Hampshire, UK, a clinic for natural medicine, has similar thoughts to Lori. He believes that many drugs treat the pain but not the cause.

He wrote and said, “In today’s world where scientific enquiry is intimately linked up with medicine and health, it is encouraging to note that studies in seemingly disparate fields of science are lending support to the principles that have guided more ancient forms of medicine.

“Quantum physics hints at how intention can have a direct effect on material reality. Endocrinology has more recently spawned PNIE (psycho-neuro-immono-endocrinology), which studies the chemistry of how thought forms effect the physical body through hormone secretions. Neuroscience is growing in awareness of how the structure of our thoughts determines the physical structure of our neuron connections, which in turn determines our future thoughts. Epigenetics teaches us how our genes, far from being hard-wired keys to the fate of generations, are actually switched on and off by conscious thought and environmental influences. Though it may take a long time to filter into the medical school curriculum, modern science gives us plenty of good reason to look beyond drug-based medicine to more holistic views of human health.”


But the fact remains we still need our co-proxamol or a healthy substitute that will have the same effect. Any ideas Mark? I will let you know his comments when he thinks about that.

FIND YOUR MP

Think we must look to the ‘corridors of power’ and ALL write to our MPs if we hope to make changes. If you do not know who he or she is look at the link below and put in your postcode – and as if by magic the name will appear. You can be linked to a message box but I write it out first and then copy and paste it, having read and spell checked it. Or you can investigate and find the email. Most MPs use their

surnameinitial@parliament.gov. or you can write to the local constituency office.

What is possibly more interesting in this MP and post code exercise is the website reveals how your MPs is voting on different important issues helping you to decide if you want to vote for him or her next time. You can even set up an email alert to have details every time your MP speaks in the House. This is an interesting site.

http://www.theyworkforyou.com/

So we have the name of your MP but it is very likely a u-turn would not be accepted by the Government who would want to save face. However given enough evidence about the pain and suffering we poor fibromites and patients have been through as a direct result of the withdrawal of co-proxamol, they might be persuaded to allow it to become a controlled drug.

Write to your MP with graphic details of your illness, disease, pains, suffering plus the relief you had when taking co-proxamol, and the anguish and stress you are now suffering. A copy to the Readers’ Letters in your local paper encouraging others to write to the MP – give the name and contact– and your MP might be overwhelmed – we hope.

If you are emailing your MP include your address so he knows you are one of his constituents (he will want your vote) and if you send a copy to me (the email address is fmsglobalnews@mac.com), it would be great. I will publish good comments when I receive them. There is no requirement for the MP to answer letters if you do not live in his constituency, so he needs proof with your address.

Why not send a copy to begga@parliament.uk. This lady MP is someone who fought long and hard to save co-proxamol without success. She will welcome your letters, which will allow her to raise the matter again. Use CO-PROXAMOL in the subject of your email.

If you also have fibromyalgia you should point out all the symptoms, the impact and the poor quality of life FMS has had together with the financial burden. Write similar details about whatever illness you have. Describe how much you relied on co-proxamol with no side effects and write about the problems you have with the alternatives.

Ask the MP to raise a question in the House on your behalf and if you have FMS, for the fibromyalgia community totalling two million, mainly women, with many of them relying on co-proxamol for pain relief.

Suggest your own supplies that you had hidden for a rainy day are now depleted and there is no suitable alternative to bring you any pain relief.

What is a controlled drug (medicine)?

(http://www.nhs.uk/chq/Pages/1391.aspx?CategoryID=73&SubCategoryID=101)

Some prescription medicines, such as morphine, pethidine, and methadone are classified as controlled drugs. As these medicines are sometimes misused, they have stricter legal controls on their supply to prevent them being obtained illegally.

If you have been prescribed a controlled drug, there are some additional regulations that govern how the medicine can be supplied to you that are important for you to know.

What are the special regulations?

These include regulations regarding who can prescribe the controlled medicine. Doctors, dentists, and some specially trained nurses, and pharmacists, are allowed to prescribe them. Midwives may also use a limited range of controlled medicines.

There are also legal controls regarding how the prescription is written, and how much of the medicine may be prescribed at a time.

The pharmacist must follow special regulations for the storage of controlled drugs, and must make a record of the prescription in a controlled drugs register. They must also check that the prescription is correctly written before supplying the medicine. The prescription may need to be re-written if it is not legally correct.

Are there any special regulations for patients?

If you are collecting schedule two controlled drugs, such as morphine, or pethidine, from the pharmacy, you will be asked to show proof of your identity – for example, a driving license, or your passport. You will also need to sign the back of your prescription. To collect a schedule three controlled drug, such as flunitrazepam, you will just need to sign the prescription.

You must ensure that all controlled drugs are properly and safely stored at home, and if you carry them around, you must always ensure the safety of others.

It is very important that medicines are never given to anyone other than the person for whom they are intended.

Travelling abroad

If you are travelling abroad for a period of over three months, you will need to have a personal licence for carrying controlled drugs. It is important to be aware of the following points:

Your doctor must support applications for a licence.

You should allow 10 days for the application to be processed

Controlled drugs licences do not have any legal status.

A personal licence has no legal status outside of the UK, and is intended to help you pass through UK Customs with your controlled drugs. Therefore, it is recommended that you contact the Embassy, High Consulate, or High Commission of the country that you are visiting (or any country that you are travelling through) to see what their local policy is regarding the importation of controlled drugs.

If you are staying in a country outside the UK for more than three months, you should register with a doctor in that country so that you can receive further prescriptions.

Your controlled drugs should be:

carried in the original packaging,

carried in your hand luggage (BAA, or airline regulations, permitting),

carried with a valid personal import/export licence – only applicable if travelling for more than three months (see above), and

carried with a letter from the prescribing doctor confirming the carrier’s name, destination, and drug details (including
amounts).

For further information and enquiries about personal licences for controlled drugs, you can contact the Home Office, Drugs Branch (telephone number: 020 7035 0486 / 0487), or you can visit their website. See the ‘further information’ section for details.

Countries such as India, Pakistan, and Turkey, have lists of certain medicines that they will not allow in the country. Before travelling, it is therefore worth visiting the UK Foreign and Commonwealth (FCO) website in order to obtain a full list of embassy contact details. You can also refer to the Department of Health’s advice for travellers (see below).

Last reviewed: 28/03/2008 Next review due: 28/09/2009 Courtesy of http://www.direct.gov.uk

Please note the day of the next review – it must be time to start writing to ask if co-proxamol can be included in this list.


About the NHS – The NHS Constitution

Now read this…… about the ownership of the NHS and resources to improve our health

The NHS belongs to us all. The NHS Constitution was published on January 21 2009. It brings together in one place for the first time in the history of the NHS what staff, patients and public can expect from the NHS. It explains that by working together we can make the very best of finite resources to improve our health and wellbeing, to keep mentally and physically well, to get better when we are ill, and when we cannot recover to stay as wellas we can to the end of our lives. The constitution reaffirms that everyone has a role to play in the success of the NHS.

As well as capturing the purpose, principles and values of the NHS, the constitution brings together a number of rights, pledges and responsibilities for staff and patients alike. These rights and responsibilities are the result of extensive discussions and consultations with staff, patients and public and it reflects what matters to them.

Subject to parliamentary approval, all NHS bodies, and private and third-sector providers supplying NHS services, in England will be required by law to take account of the constitution in their decisions and actions. The government will have a legal duty to renew the constitution every 10 years. No government will be able to change the constitution without the full involvement of staff, patients and the public.

Download The NHS Constitution and The Handbook to the NHS Constitution from

http://www.nhs.uk/aboutNHS/constitution/Pages/Constitution.aspx

For more information and related documents:


http://www.dh.gov.uk/nhsconstitution

So where does that leave us?

I believe the best way to make changes to these documents is by writing to our MPs, asking them to raised questions in the House, which will inevitably get publicity and more support to make co-proxamol a controlled medicine.

Below is an extract from the article I wrote prior to the withdrawal with all the promises made by Caroline Flint MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Department of Health, in the House of Commons. Feel free to quote sections in your letter if you think this will help or look up the original post in the November archives.

26 NOV.2007 CO-PROXAMOL UK WITHDRAWAL DEBATE FMSGLOBALNEWS.WORDPRESS.COM

Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Department of Health, Caroline Flint responds to questions concerning the withdrawal of co-proxamol.

It was reported co-proxamol had been available for some 40 years and many patients who were distressed about the withdrawal, had written expressing this view. It was said co-proxamol would be available on a named basis only at the end of the withdrawal period. The MHRA will ensure GPs are aware of this and this should resolve the supply question.

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary confirmed GPs would still be able to prescribe co-proxamol if there is a clinical need and if no satisfactory alternative could be used. There will however be a much stronger focus on “risk benefit judgment for the particular patient”.

Caroline Flint said the Department of Health would support the decision but would accept there could be a need to allow co-proxamol to be prescribed for some patients where there was a clinical need.Responding to a question on the availability of future supplies, the MP said it would be necessary to decide about the future for the minority who are prescribed co-proxamol as the only acceptable painkiller to bring relief.

She added that the Government is sensitive to the problem and accept that pain management is a complex matter.

In response to a request from the press it was reported the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency had said co-proxamol would be available to patients on their “own responsibility” subject to clinical needs. But this report did not coincide with feedback from patients said the MP Anne Begg.

The Parliamentary Under-Secretary hoped Arthritis Care and similar groups would feel reassured by her comments and her “acceptance of the possibility that co-proxamol will continue to be prescribed where there is a clear clinical need because alternative treatments are unsuitable.”

Arthritis Care who have been opposed to the withdrawal of this drug since it was first announced, had been working with some MPs to have the issue raised in Parliament again this year.

The Arthritis Care website believed the named patient basis only was not a satisfactory way to ensure those who need the painkiller would receive it. The charity continues to argue for a review of how best to make co-proxamol available long term.

On their website Arthritis Care have invited those in pain, who had been transferred from co-proxamol to another drug, to contact them with comments in the efficiency of the alternative, to help further this cause. Telephone 0207 380 6547 or contact -

Campaigns@Arthritiscare.org.uk,
WalesCampaigns@Arthritiscare.org.uk,
or ScotlandCampaigns@Arthritiscare.org.uk.


I have written to Arthritis Care today and I am waiting for their up dated opinion – that I will pass on.

So will you be emailing me at fmsglobalnews@mac.com with copies of your emails to the MPs and local papers, as well as telling me about your problems in life without co-proxamol? We need all the ammunition we can get. Please start writing. Take care. Jeanne

LATEST NEWS

I have just had a reply back from Arthritis Care that I believe sounds promising. Jane wrote, “Thank you for your message about co-proxamol. You certainly raise topical and important points of concern to many in the arthritis community; I have taken the liberty of forwarding your email to our policy and campaigns unit who work on the co-proxamol issue. Many thanks for contacting me in the first instance about this – as a user-led organisation, we rely on such communication to help us reflect the reality of people’s experience.”

If you want to write to Arthritis Care you can contact the UK office Campaigns team by calling 0207 380 6534 or emailing us at Campaigns@Arthritiscare.org.uk. I would love to hear about it. Thanks.

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