This letter was submitted by Professor Hooper to the Observer, in response to the article by Robin McKie "Chronic fatigue syndrome researchers face death threats from militants", published on Sunday the 21st of August 2011:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/aug/21/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-myalgic-encephalomyelitis/print
Professor Hooper was contacted out of the blue by the
reader's editor of the Observer. They spoke at length on the telephone and the
editor asked Professor Hooper to respond to Robin McKie's article.
The editor indicated that the responses to the
article were building up into a feature length article for the Magazine section
and Professor Hooper agreed to submit a longer article as well as a letter.
He received an acknowledgement from the reader's
editor saying it was there intention to use the letter but the following day he
received a further email from the same person to say it would not be published.
From Malcolm Hooper Ph.D.,B.Pharm.,C.Chem.,MRIC
Emeritus Professor of Medicinal Chemistry
University of Sunderland, SUNDERLAND SR2 3SD
Chief Scientific Adviser to the Gulf Veterans'
Association
President: the National Gulf War Veterans and
Families Association, NGVFA, (2002)
25 August 2011
Dear Sir
No right-minded person condones any campaign of
vilification against psychiatrists but equally, no right-minded person can
condone what psychiatrists like Wessely have done to the UK ME community over
the last 25 years.
It is indefensible to liken people with ME to the
Animal Liberation Front; this is an attack on the whole ME community, not only
the few people who have behaved irrationally.
ME has been in the medical literature for the last 70
years and classified by the WHO as a neurological disorder since 1969.
The recent International Consensus Criteria for ME
produced by 26 world experts from 13 countries shows ME to be a complex,
chronic illness of which post-exertional malaise (inability to recover after
exercise) is the cardinal feature. This makes exercise dangerous and sometimes
fatal. There are multiple symptoms and multiple clinical signs showing
dysfunction and dysregulation of all the major organs and systems of the body.
No NHS clinician has the autonomy to regard ME as a
somatoform disorder. The Department of Health has confirmed in writing that:
“ICD-10 is an NHS Information Standard…..There is a legal obligation for
Department of Health to provide ICD data to the WHO for international
comparison. The NHS was mandated to implement ICD-10 on 1 April 1995, at which
time there was a formal consultation…. Implementation…applies to NHS
organisations and their system suppliers, such as acute and foundation trusts,
primary care trusts, and the NHS Information Centre”. The Wessely School
psychiatrists, many GPs and NHS neurologists are in breach of this mandate.
For Wessely School psychiatrists to continually
ignore the scientific evidence is wilful ignorance but to advise the DWP
decision-makers and train ATOS examiners that ME is a mental disorder is
deceitful and abusive; to section patients with ME and remove them from their
distraught families is abusive; to make sick people worse by inappropriate interventions
is abusive; to deny them financial support necessary to survive is abusive; to
mock them and to misinform others about their serious disorder is abusive; to
insist that they suffer from wrong thinking and a fear of activity when they
suffer from a very serious medical disorder with reproducible multiple systemic
abnormalities is abusive.
These psychiatrists, who have direct and lucrative
links with the Insurance industry, have been reported to Parliament. The
industry stands to lose £ millions if it has to pay out for a severe life-long
physical illness whereas psychiatric (functional, somatoform) conditions are
usually excluded and lower benefits paid by the DWP.
The true ME story has yet to be told.
Malcolm Hooper
Permission to repost.