Abstract:
This paper examines doctors’ and patients’ views on the consequences of an increasingly common symptomatic diagnosis, chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
Two studies were conducted: the first comprised interviews with 20 general practitioners; the second was a longitudinal study, comprising three interviews over a period of 2 years with 50 people diagnosed with CFS. Contrasts were apparent between doctors’ practical and ethical concerns about articulating a diagnosis of CFS and patients’ experiences with and without such a diagnosis.
Seventy per cent of the doctors were reluctant to articulate a diagnosis of CFS. They felt constrained by the scientific uncertainty regarding its aetiology and by a concern that diagnosis might become a disabling self-fulfilling prophecy. Patients, by contrast, highlighted the enabling aspects of a singular coherent diagnosis and emphasized the negative effects of having no explanation for their problems.
Comment in: Diagnosis in chronic illness. [J R Soc Med. 1995]
Source: Woodward RV, Broom DH, Legge DG. Diagnosis in chronic illness: disabling or enabling–the case of chronic fatigue syndrome. J R Soc Med. 1995 Jun;88(6):325-9. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1295234/ (Full article)