BMJ 1995;311:1093 (21 October)
Letters
Disentangling common characteristics is not so easy
EDITOR,--Over the past few years I have seen a growing number of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome who have been told by psychiatrists and psychologists that abnormal illness behaviour and psychosocial factors are the main factors perpetuating their disability. Few patients have accepted or believed this explanation; neither have I. The ME Association now has evidence that the fashionable theory of abnormal illness behaviour linked to somatisation is being used by several agencies as a convenient excuse for turning down applications for financial benefits or for putting pressure on vulnerable patients to undergo speculative "rehabilitation" programmes, which they may be reluctant to participate in.
Although Peter Trigwell and colleagues conclude that patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome and multiple sclerosis have virtually identical patterns of illness behaviour without any form of shared aetiology, their study suggests that the two conditions may have more in common than just central fatigue . . . [Full text of this article]

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