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It's All in Your Head: Stories from the Frontline of Psychosomatic Illness

It's All in Your Head: Stories from the Frontline of Psychosomatic Illness

bySuzanne O'Sullivan
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Top positive review

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Richard Gipps
5.0 out of 5 starsHumane, thoughtful, honest
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 20 June 2015
I'm not normally a fan of popular science style writing, but this book is utterly charming, educational, and provided for this reader that delightful experience of being accompanied and engaged by a friendly and thoughtful voice through the whole reading of it. Suzanne O'Sullivan takes us through a range of different conditions - hysterical paralyses and blindness, pseudo-epileptic seizures, physiologically inexplicable fatigue and pain, loss of sensation, blackouts, and other difficulties. She introduces us to important historical figures - Freud, Charcot and Janet - and to different hysterical epidemics of different times and to their different conceptualisations; she also points out the considerable prevalence and financial cost of these conditions, and documents the significant health risks that come from wrongly diagnosing them as physical conditions (i.e. dangerous and toxic treatments, unnecessary medications, continuing invalidism, failure to procure necessary psychotherapeutic help, etc.) - which is important given how lazily easy it can be to believe that the patient with a psychosomatic condition is best served by erring on the side of physical aetiology and treatment.

The book does not pretend to provide a philosophically or neuropsychologically satisfactory approach to, as it were, cracking the venerable mind-body problem, but instead takes a pragmatic approach to diagnosis and management. The main thesis is that unbearable stress/anxiety/overwhelming shock/sadness/demoralisation are what cause the unconscious choice of physical symptoms, along with the secondary gains of illness behaviour (i.e. being looked after and attended to) and a hypochondriacal focus on unwanted bodily experiences. Notwithstanding the largely pragmatic focus the author maintains a level-headed approach to such ethical issues as the rhetorically-charged 'reality' of psychosomatic conditions - often urging us not to conflate what is real with what is physically caused - nor to view what is physical as somehow more serious by way of cause and effect than what is psychological - nor for that matter to view what is unconsciously psychological as in any way more blameworthy or contrived than what is physiological - as both the champions and detractors of 'chronic fatigue syndrome' are apt to do.

Speaking of CFS, Dr O'Sullivan takes what I believe to be a brave and honest stance, stating clearly her reasons for taking CFS to be equivalent to ME, why it is an extremely debilitating condition, why it demands serious and caring attention, and why it is best understood psychologically (the not uncommon alexithymia (diminished recognition of one's own emotions), comorbidity of CFS with various less contentiously psychosomatic conditions, and the frequent difficulty shown in accepting the possibility of psychological origin and maintenance (compare those who suffer with epilepsy or other debilitating conditions who are often far more ready to accept the possible impact of stress) being three of the main such reasons). I've just looked at the poor reviews this book has often received on this website, and it seems clear to me that many of them are written by people who simply have not read the book - who, for example, claim that Dr O'Sullivan is somehow disparaging those with CFS or viewing their suffering as not real, when this is exactly what she is not saying or doing - but who have an axe to grind regarding a particular aetiology of this particular condition as described in one chapter. Another valuable aspect of the book is the way it eschews dualistic approaches which assume that psychological conditions somehow don't implicate significant changes in neurological and endocrine etc functioning. What makes a condition psychological is surely that a psychological explanation is the best explanation of its arising and maintenance; it is not thereby somehow implied that the relevant causal processes are not, as the philosophers say, 'realised in' significant alterations in e.g. the autonomic nervous system - I mean, they've got to have some physiological instantiation, right?
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Top critical review

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Nancy Blake
1.0 out of 5 starsWho benefits from calling ME/CFS psychosomatic?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 29 July 2016
Review of 'It's All In Your Head'

Am I imagining that the original subtitle was 'True Stories of Imaginary Illness'? The copy I've just received appears to have replaced that with 'Stories from the Frontline of Psychosomatic Illness'.

This book, which consists of a set of case studies by a highly qualified neurologist setting out medical judgements about the status of her patients (that their illnesses are psychosomatic) has won a prize in a competition which specifies that the books entered must not be medical research. This seems to justify, or even require, the absence of references to the sources of her information.

Each chapter includes a section setting out the history of medical thinking about symptoms and illnesses which, depending on the state of medical information for the period, were 'medically unexplained'. (MUS, medically unexplained symptoms, has now become a psychiatric condition in its own right.). From Galen, through Beard, Janet, Charcot, Freud and more recent sociological theorists, we are led to, and encouraged to agree with the contemporary psychosocial thinking which has had such a negative impact particularly on attitudes and policies towards the disabled, especially those disabled by ME/CFS. Mo Stewart, in the article 'The Takeover By the US Private Medical Insurance Industry of the UK Welfare State', published by the Black Triangle Campaign for the rights of people who are disabled details this effect. Several of the psychiatrists who promote the psychiatric model have, or have had financial connections with medical insurers, and with the DWP.

A theme which runs through the book is how unwilling her patients are to accept any suggestion that their symptoms might have an emotional/psychological basis; how difficult a task it is for a doctor to impart this opinion to patients without inspiring anger and fierce denial. Patients, according to the author, are blind to their emotional difficulties, they are unreliable reporters, if only they would be willing to see a psychiatrist, their problems could be resolved. In the meantime, she asserts, the symptoms are random, inexplicable, impossible to make sense of. This very randomness is evidence of their origin in emotion, not a physical problem.

As a very experienced psychotherapist who has run a centre for people with mental health problems, I find that psychiatric difficulties are far from random and incomprehensible. The patient who is depressed has experienced much to be depressed about. Anxiety develops in a childhood where separations have occurred at an early age, or discipline has involved threats of abandonment. 'School phobia' is often actually concern for the safety of a sick, anxious, or abused parent. 'Blackouts', once physical disorder had been ruled out, turns out to be behaviour 'learned' in a family where mother was too exhausted by a husband with MS and a son with muscular dystrophy to pay attention to his healthy brother. Psychiatric problems do not drop out of the sky and without a narrative that makes sense of my patients' physical symptoms, I would send them for further physical investigation. 'Medically unexplained' does not automatically mean 'psychiatric', it means what it says.

In my experience, and Dr. Gary Kaplan, author of 'Total Recovery' which deals with chronic pain and depression, agrees...patients are excellent sources of information and very reliable reporters. All that is needed is for them to be asked, respectfully, the questions that allow them to provide the relevant information, and then to be believed. If, instead of trying to figure out tactful ways to impose her view that her patients has a psychiatric problem, the author took the time to listen to the patient's whole history, not just the medical report, it is likely to become evident to the patient herself that her symptoms are connected to various life events, and therefore realise she could be helped by a chance to revisit and resolve those issues.

In the book there are one or two cases in which the narrative leading to psychosomatic symptoms is clearly set out, in others it is hinted at. One patient is caught out as a benefits fraud'; one is clearly a hypochondriac, highly anxious, developing symptom after symptom as each is explained or dismissed.

The author discusses the evolution of thinking about psychosomatic illnesses with some significant omissions...according to critics of Charcot and Freud, their patients' 'hysteria' seems in retrospect to fit descriptions of prefrontal epilepsy. Breuer's Anna O (Bertha Pappenheim) is said to have relapsed and been institutionalised for several years. No mention of the fact that she went on to become a major figure in fighting for women's rights and education within the Jewish community, effectively creating the profession of social worker. But emphasising how symptoms can be created through the intense attention and suggestion involved in hypnosis lays the groundwork for this as a feature in psychosomatic conditions, and is undoubtedly part of the mechanism of genuinely psychosomatic conditions.

The author continually emphasises that patients are resistant to psychiatric diagnoses, that psychosomatic symptoms are random and variable, that there is no understandable pattern in psychiatrically caused symptoms. Symptoms can be created and magnified just by paying too much attention to them. Patients are unreliable reporters of their own experience.

Enter Rachel, and ME/CFS. The groundwork has been laid. ME has lots of variable symptoms, involving many organ systems. Sounds random. But even doctors who 'don't believe in ME' can recognise the complex pattern ... muscle weakness and pain, cognitive problems, problems indicating endocrine dysregulation..disturbed sleep rhythms, control of body temperature, and problems indicating ongoing immune activity (ongoing sore throat, swollen lymph glands, low fever) which vary in location and intensity, and all of which are exacerbated by exertion. A pattern so complex that it would be difficult to construct, or purposely create (and who would want to).

The author tells us that the first outbreak was at the Royal Free Hospital in 1955, when 'even the doctors and nurses' got sick. No, in hospital outbreaks, it is mainly the nurses..the most physically active, and the doctors who get sick. The patients, who are resting, rarely get it. No mention of Los Angeles in 1932, when it was called 'atypical polio'. Can't be EBV, everyone has antibodies to that. Everyone had versions of the polio viruses but very few got sick and even fewer got paralysed. (The ones who exercised after they got sick were the ones who ended up paralysed.).

Rachel, and other ME sufferers, report happy and relatively stress-free childhoods. No traumatic narrative. The author says this is impossible, she herself experiences stress every day. They are obviously in denial.

Rachel is a dancer, desperate to return to her chosen career. She insists ME is physical and wants to be treated with a drug that has been used in the U.S. for treatment of people with viral illnesses. The author points out that no drug has been authorised for use in ME. In fact, many have been tried and benefits found, but research trials don't involve significant numbers of patients, and it's difficult to find funding for research trials except those set up to support the psychiatric model. Such as the PACE Trial, which was funded by the DWP. However it has just been announced that Hemispherx will be trialling Ampligen in an Early Access Programme in Europe and Turkey, so a drug that has benefitted patients in the U.S. for years may now obtain the approvals previously withheld.

Rachel reports having been made worse by her treatment (CBT/GET). The author assures her that if a treatment doesn't work the first time, she must try it again. A recent article by Dr Mark Vint, 'The PACE Trial Invalidates the Use of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Graded Exercise Therapy in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Review', published in the Journal of Neurology and Neurobiology, Volume 2.3, March 2016 points out that any drug treatment with a similar rate of adverse effects would be immediately withdrawn.

Pain is a very common symptom, virtually everyone has pain. (No mention of years of severe, untreatable pain, as experienced by many ME patients.).

The author believes that ME/CFS is largely if not completely psychological. She says that in these illnesses, we need to consider what the patient may gain from it. In ME, these gains, after losing ones relationships, profession, status, income, home, previous activities such as sport, hiking, travel, may - or may not- include some sort of disability payment, some level of social help. Often not.

Who might have something to gain from the publication, favourable reviews, the award given to a book which supports this model of ME/CFS?

Or, if, as recommended by the US Institute of Medicine, this illness is recognised as a disease, not a psychiatric condition, in which 'exertion of any kind.....may adversely affect many organ systems'....who has something to lose?
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Nancy Blake
1.0 out of 5 stars Who benefits from calling ME/CFS psychosomatic?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 29 July 2016
Verified Purchase
Review of 'It's All In Your Head'

Am I imagining that the original subtitle was 'True Stories of Imaginary Illness'? The copy I've just received appears to have replaced that with 'Stories from the Frontline of Psychosomatic Illness'.

This book, which consists of a set of case studies by a highly qualified neurologist setting out medical judgements about the status of her patients (that their illnesses are psychosomatic) has won a prize in a competition which specifies that the books entered must not be medical research. This seems to justify, or even require, the absence of references to the sources of her information.

Each chapter includes a section setting out the history of medical thinking about symptoms and illnesses which, depending on the state of medical information for the period, were 'medically unexplained'. (MUS, medically unexplained symptoms, has now become a psychiatric condition in its own right.). From Galen, through Beard, Janet, Charcot, Freud and more recent sociological theorists, we are led to, and encouraged to agree with the contemporary psychosocial thinking which has had such a negative impact particularly on attitudes and policies towards the disabled, especially those disabled by ME/CFS. Mo Stewart, in the article 'The Takeover By the US Private Medical Insurance Industry of the UK Welfare State', published by the Black Triangle Campaign for the rights of people who are disabled details this effect. Several of the psychiatrists who promote the psychiatric model have, or have had financial connections with medical insurers, and with the DWP.

A theme which runs through the book is how unwilling her patients are to accept any suggestion that their symptoms might have an emotional/psychological basis; how difficult a task it is for a doctor to impart this opinion to patients without inspiring anger and fierce denial. Patients, according to the author, are blind to their emotional difficulties, they are unreliable reporters, if only they would be willing to see a psychiatrist, their problems could be resolved. In the meantime, she asserts, the symptoms are random, inexplicable, impossible to make sense of. This very randomness is evidence of their origin in emotion, not a physical problem.

As a very experienced psychotherapist who has run a centre for people with mental health problems, I find that psychiatric difficulties are far from random and incomprehensible. The patient who is depressed has experienced much to be depressed about. Anxiety develops in a childhood where separations have occurred at an early age, or discipline has involved threats of abandonment. 'School phobia' is often actually concern for the safety of a sick, anxious, or abused parent. 'Blackouts', once physical disorder had been ruled out, turns out to be behaviour 'learned' in a family where mother was too exhausted by a husband with MS and a son with muscular dystrophy to pay attention to his healthy brother. Psychiatric problems do not drop out of the sky and without a narrative that makes sense of my patients' physical symptoms, I would send them for further physical investigation. 'Medically unexplained' does not automatically mean 'psychiatric', it means what it says.

In my experience, and Dr. Gary Kaplan, author of 'Total Recovery' which deals with chronic pain and depression, agrees...patients are excellent sources of information and very reliable reporters. All that is needed is for them to be asked, respectfully, the questions that allow them to provide the relevant information, and then to be believed. If, instead of trying to figure out tactful ways to impose her view that her patients has a psychiatric problem, the author took the time to listen to the patient's whole history, not just the medical report, it is likely to become evident to the patient herself that her symptoms are connected to various life events, and therefore realise she could be helped by a chance to revisit and resolve those issues.

In the book there are one or two cases in which the narrative leading to psychosomatic symptoms is clearly set out, in others it is hinted at. One patient is caught out as a benefits fraud'; one is clearly a hypochondriac, highly anxious, developing symptom after symptom as each is explained or dismissed.

The author discusses the evolution of thinking about psychosomatic illnesses with some significant omissions...according to critics of Charcot and Freud, their patients' 'hysteria' seems in retrospect to fit descriptions of prefrontal epilepsy. Breuer's Anna O (Bertha Pappenheim) is said to have relapsed and been institutionalised for several years. No mention of the fact that she went on to become a major figure in fighting for women's rights and education within the Jewish community, effectively creating the profession of social worker. But emphasising how symptoms can be created through the intense attention and suggestion involved in hypnosis lays the groundwork for this as a feature in psychosomatic conditions, and is undoubtedly part of the mechanism of genuinely psychosomatic conditions.

The author continually emphasises that patients are resistant to psychiatric diagnoses, that psychosomatic symptoms are random and variable, that there is no understandable pattern in psychiatrically caused symptoms. Symptoms can be created and magnified just by paying too much attention to them. Patients are unreliable reporters of their own experience.

Enter Rachel, and ME/CFS. The groundwork has been laid. ME has lots of variable symptoms, involving many organ systems. Sounds random. But even doctors who 'don't believe in ME' can recognise the complex pattern ... muscle weakness and pain, cognitive problems, problems indicating endocrine dysregulation..disturbed sleep rhythms, control of body temperature, and problems indicating ongoing immune activity (ongoing sore throat, swollen lymph glands, low fever) which vary in location and intensity, and all of which are exacerbated by exertion. A pattern so complex that it would be difficult to construct, or purposely create (and who would want to).

The author tells us that the first outbreak was at the Royal Free Hospital in 1955, when 'even the doctors and nurses' got sick. No, in hospital outbreaks, it is mainly the nurses..the most physically active, and the doctors who get sick. The patients, who are resting, rarely get it. No mention of Los Angeles in 1932, when it was called 'atypical polio'. Can't be EBV, everyone has antibodies to that. Everyone had versions of the polio viruses but very few got sick and even fewer got paralysed. (The ones who exercised after they got sick were the ones who ended up paralysed.).

Rachel, and other ME sufferers, report happy and relatively stress-free childhoods. No traumatic narrative. The author says this is impossible, she herself experiences stress every day. They are obviously in denial.

Rachel is a dancer, desperate to return to her chosen career. She insists ME is physical and wants to be treated with a drug that has been used in the U.S. for treatment of people with viral illnesses. The author points out that no drug has been authorised for use in ME. In fact, many have been tried and benefits found, but research trials don't involve significant numbers of patients, and it's difficult to find funding for research trials except those set up to support the psychiatric model. Such as the PACE Trial, which was funded by the DWP. However it has just been announced that Hemispherx will be trialling Ampligen in an Early Access Programme in Europe and Turkey, so a drug that has benefitted patients in the U.S. for years may now obtain the approvals previously withheld.

Rachel reports having been made worse by her treatment (CBT/GET). The author assures her that if a treatment doesn't work the first time, she must try it again. A recent article by Dr Mark Vint, 'The PACE Trial Invalidates the Use of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Graded Exercise Therapy in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Review', published in the Journal of Neurology and Neurobiology, Volume 2.3, March 2016 points out that any drug treatment with a similar rate of adverse effects would be immediately withdrawn.

Pain is a very common symptom, virtually everyone has pain. (No mention of years of severe, untreatable pain, as experienced by many ME patients.).

The author believes that ME/CFS is largely if not completely psychological. She says that in these illnesses, we need to consider what the patient may gain from it. In ME, these gains, after losing ones relationships, profession, status, income, home, previous activities such as sport, hiking, travel, may - or may not- include some sort of disability payment, some level of social help. Often not.

Who might have something to gain from the publication, favourable reviews, the award given to a book which supports this model of ME/CFS?

Or, if, as recommended by the US Institute of Medicine, this illness is recognised as a disease, not a psychiatric condition, in which 'exertion of any kind.....may adversely affect many organ systems'....who has something to lose?
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E Bosman
2.0 out of 5 stars A medical psychologist's perspective
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 9 June 2015
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Before the review below is dismissed as the ramblings of a prejudiced layman or gullible scientist, I should perhaps start by noting that I am Fellow of the British Psychological Society, that I passed my exam in neurology and trained at a University to be a psychotherapist. I know about hysteria, Freud, psychosomatic conditions and about functional and medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). I’ve studied ME and CFS since 1983.

My first thought on reading the book was whether a scientist who evaluates evidence with a critical eye would cover ME or CFS alongside psychosomatic illness and what we used to call hysteria. For one thing, CFS or ME/CFS are still poorly defined and too many studies have excluded individuals with neurological symptoms and signs. Fatigue is often measured using a deeply flawed questionnaire and objective tests that focus on the key symptom of post-exertional exacerbations, are not done. Studies assessing treatments rarely provide useful information such as, ability to return to previous life/job etc. And how effective is an intervention if 50% of the patients remain reliant on disability benefits? In short, the field is complex and the findings are hard to interpret. However, if you do select patients well and follow people who, for instance, have just been diagnosed with a lab confirmed infection, what you see is that the only difference between those who recover and those who don't is the severity of the initial illness. The stress and depression documented in journals may be the result of having to deal with disbelief or a lack of support and understanding. Any psychological factors reported in the literature are almost certainly not the ‘roots’ of the illness, especially when diagnosed using the CDC criteria of 1994. To my knowledge, those who developed ME during the 1948 and 1955 outbreaks were not a subset who had all suffered a traumatic event during childhood or the previous year. They just caught an infection and probably had the wrong genes (cf Lloyd et al).

In this book, ME is described in terms of MUPS and psychosomatic illness. However, I question whether the former is a helpful concept. It should signify that the cause is unclear but in the real world, doctors perceive these disorders as due to, or perpetuated by stress. O’ Sullivan admits she often has the feeling she might have missed something. When assessing fatigue, dizziness and headaches, I wonder if she considers environmental factors such as the additives in food and the products we use at home? The notion that they might play a role is not based on speculation by untrained practitioners. It’s not a fashion. It’s based on reports from the WHO and EU, as well as studies in the Lancet and from Harvard.

Some of the information about ME and CFS is contentious or plain wrong. For example, there were cases before the outbreak at the Royal Free. It's not the same illness as fibromyalgia (just too many differences). As for CBT being the “most effective” treatment, you can only argue that if you ignore the studies of alternative programmes (Taylor, Ho-Yen etc).

A surprising number of the case histories describe people with various dissociative states and pseudoseizures. Careful history taking often revealed a psychological trigger and I know that such patients exist. But some of the author’s thoughts about causation only reinforced my belief that there’s a world of difference between those disorders and ME, CFS and IBS. For example, she refers to patients responding to “every bodily sensation” rather than ignoring them “as the majority of us do” (p. 280), to them losing the ability to interpret their emotional state (p. 243), and to doctors having to figure out “what purpose the illness serves” (p. 309). She also discusses illness as an “escape or explanation for failure” (p. 198) and then comments that patients with ME deny that stress can affect their illness (p.243). “Perhaps those who deny stress do so because they do not feel stress, having converted it to something else.” That’s speculating well beyond the evidence.

The devil is in the detail. For example, O’Sullivan posits that if a symptom cannot be measured, that creates an ideal opportunity for denial to flourish (p. 217). I can see her point but classic ME is more than fatigue and we can support a diagnosis by measuring muscle strength 24 hours after exercise, or by repeating a brain scan like SPECT (Paul et al 1999, Hyde et al 1992, p.vii). Doctors just don’t bother.

On the positive side, the book is easy to read and I found some case histories fascinating. However, the author’s lack of knowledge of ME is very obvious. Even the case history of CFS left me with questions. Onset was gradual rather than post-viral, there was some evidence of overtraining, Lyme disease and fibromyalgia etc. Whether Rachel had classic ME is a moot point.

Few would argue that the mind affects the body. If you hear about someone with lice, whose scalp does not begin to itch? Focusing on ME, I am not persuaded that including it in a book with so many histories of trauma-linked psychiatric disorders is going to increase anyone’s understanding. I fear that many readers will end up with a distorted view of MUPS in general, and ME and IBS in particular. And if you have ME, it’s simply depressing.
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Richard Gipps
5.0 out of 5 stars Humane, thoughtful, honest
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 20 June 2015
Verified Purchase
I'm not normally a fan of popular science style writing, but this book is utterly charming, educational, and provided for this reader that delightful experience of being accompanied and engaged by a friendly and thoughtful voice through the whole reading of it. Suzanne O'Sullivan takes us through a range of different conditions - hysterical paralyses and blindness, pseudo-epileptic seizures, physiologically inexplicable fatigue and pain, loss of sensation, blackouts, and other difficulties. She introduces us to important historical figures - Freud, Charcot and Janet - and to different hysterical epidemics of different times and to their different conceptualisations; she also points out the considerable prevalence and financial cost of these conditions, and documents the significant health risks that come from wrongly diagnosing them as physical conditions (i.e. dangerous and toxic treatments, unnecessary medications, continuing invalidism, failure to procure necessary psychotherapeutic help, etc.) - which is important given how lazily easy it can be to believe that the patient with a psychosomatic condition is best served by erring on the side of physical aetiology and treatment.

The book does not pretend to provide a philosophically or neuropsychologically satisfactory approach to, as it were, cracking the venerable mind-body problem, but instead takes a pragmatic approach to diagnosis and management. The main thesis is that unbearable stress/anxiety/overwhelming shock/sadness/demoralisation are what cause the unconscious choice of physical symptoms, along with the secondary gains of illness behaviour (i.e. being looked after and attended to) and a hypochondriacal focus on unwanted bodily experiences. Notwithstanding the largely pragmatic focus the author maintains a level-headed approach to such ethical issues as the rhetorically-charged 'reality' of psychosomatic conditions - often urging us not to conflate what is real with what is physically caused - nor to view what is physical as somehow more serious by way of cause and effect than what is psychological - nor for that matter to view what is unconsciously psychological as in any way more blameworthy or contrived than what is physiological - as both the champions and detractors of 'chronic fatigue syndrome' are apt to do.

Speaking of CFS, Dr O'Sullivan takes what I believe to be a brave and honest stance, stating clearly her reasons for taking CFS to be equivalent to ME, why it is an extremely debilitating condition, why it demands serious and caring attention, and why it is best understood psychologically (the not uncommon alexithymia (diminished recognition of one's own emotions), comorbidity of CFS with various less contentiously psychosomatic conditions, and the frequent difficulty shown in accepting the possibility of psychological origin and maintenance (compare those who suffer with epilepsy or other debilitating conditions who are often far more ready to accept the possible impact of stress) being three of the main such reasons). I've just looked at the poor reviews this book has often received on this website, and it seems clear to me that many of them are written by people who simply have not read the book - who, for example, claim that Dr O'Sullivan is somehow disparaging those with CFS or viewing their suffering as not real, when this is exactly what she is not saying or doing - but who have an axe to grind regarding a particular aetiology of this particular condition as described in one chapter. Another valuable aspect of the book is the way it eschews dualistic approaches which assume that psychological conditions somehow don't implicate significant changes in neurological and endocrine etc functioning. What makes a condition psychological is surely that a psychological explanation is the best explanation of its arising and maintenance; it is not thereby somehow implied that the relevant causal processes are not, as the philosophers say, 'realised in' significant alterations in e.g. the autonomic nervous system - I mean, they've got to have some physiological instantiation, right?
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Dr D.
5.0 out of 5 stars A pioneering introduction
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 13 August 2015
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This ground-breaking book is aimed at the lay and non-specialist medical reader. The author is a classically trained neurologist, who was attracted into the specialty by the idea that diagnoses could be made intellectually by tracing symptoms to lesions in the rails, points, or termini of the central nervous system; but she gradually came to the conclusion that for a number of sufferers it was by no means so simple. In the absence of unequivocally abnormal physical findings the source of these peoples' problems came to be regarded pejoratively as 'all in the mind,' and Dr. O'Sullivan took the trouble to write this book in order to remove this stigma, to explain that there is a part of the 'mind' below and inaccessible to the level of consciousness which can influence both mental and physical processes in ways that we do not at present understand, and to counter the resistance of both the public and the profession to the idea that these can present as genuine illnesses, susceptible to treatment by psychotherapists.

Two personal experiences have left me in no doubt that there is a murky uncontrollable subconscious which can shoot unwanted, disturbing, and revealing rockets into our everyday lives. I also believe that there is somewhere a central processing system; how else can one explain the forgotten name that pops up minutes, hours, or even days after one has failed to recall it? Something must have been looking for it.

One critic appears to think that MS was regarded as all in the mind until fairly recently. My first hospital job after qualifying in 1945 included the care of some 500 patients in what had been a poor-law workhouse infirmary. I hope I will not be mis-understood when I say that for teaching purposes the wards were a treasure house of patients suffering from chronic untreatable medical disorders, including many with multiple sclerosis, which we had no doubt was a degenerative disease of the nervous system.

My only disappointment with this wonderful book is that for the author a successful result was to overcome the patient's resistance to a psychotherapist referral; all too often we don't get to know the ultimate outcome.

Very early in the book, as an example of the way in which an emotional experience can manifest itself physically, Dr. O'Sullivan cites the account by Stendhal, the great French novelist, of his reaction to his first encounter with the great frescoes of Florence, and concludes that while his may seem to have been extreme, 'it may seem absolutely obvious that, on the day one first encounters the frescoes of Giotto, one's legs will weaken and one's heart will miss a beat.' Now I dare not contemplate what my subconscious will do to me henceforth if I do not allow the historian in me to point out that the frescoes of Giotto are in the Scrovegni chapel in Padua, where my late wife and I saw them in the 1970s. There is no record that Stendhal ever visited Padua, and in fact he wrote himself that it was the sight of the frescoes of Volterrano on 22th January 1817 that induced 'the profoundest experiences of ecstacy ... and fierce palpitations of the heart.'

With all due respect to Giotto, I have to say that what induced physiological changes in me in Padua was the sight of the two stemmata or coats of arms of William Harvey, in the courtyard adjacent to the old anatomy theatre, which is what we had come to see. In the train back to Venice my wife commented that in all our years of marriage she had never seen me so excited. Of course, she couldn't see in the dark.
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Jim H
5.0 out of 5 stars Shows us a huge gap in medical knowledge
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 22 January 2017
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An excellent book. The title could be very misleading, though. I think it was an unwise choice.

The author shows us that psychosomatic illnesses are real, that the people with them suffer greatly, that they arise from deep in the unconscious and the sufferers do not know anything about the origin of their problems; and cannot escape from them without help. Both public and medical professionals should be unreservedly sympathetic and never ever blame the sufferer.

The book is very well written and the cases described are fascinating. The author tells us that the first step in getting to grips with this huge, important, unexplored area of medicine is for both public and medics to take it seriously and fully believe in it. The second step is for psychiatry to find a way of discovering what lies at the root of each individual sufferer's distress. It seems that very little progress is being made.

I read the book in its entirety, starting at the beginning and skipping nothing. I think that if you did not do that you could seriously misunderstand the case that the author is trying to make. Each chapter tells the story of one individual, and is named after them, but it does more than just that. Embedded is part of a more general discussion of that particular aspect of the problem, or a piece of the history of medical thinking in that area.

One of the chapters is about ME/cfs. Both my wife and one of my daughters are seriously affected by this condition and I have been caring for both of them for 20 years. I think it is fair to say then that I have a great deal of knowledge of the condition. We get the journals of the main charities formed to support sufferers and I read them. I know a lot about ME. The slogan of the ME Association is, "It's Real, It's Physical". There is no doubt at all that the symptoms are real and physical, but I have been gradually feeling more and more that the underlying cause is not physical. This book comes close to confirming that. It is profoundly disappointing that although the lead people in the realm of ME treatment work in the field of psychological medicine, they have not come up with anything that will get at the root causes of sufferers' problems, but instead propose and promote physical activities that they hope will help a bit with the symptoms. It seems that they, unlike the author of this book, believe, deep down, that sufferers really could 'pull themselves together' if they tried. No wonder people get angry.

Please read this book. Properly. Right through.
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Grandma
4.0 out of 5 stars helpful overview
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 24 November 2021
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I bought this because my granddaughter has been diagnosed with FND and I wanted to gain some insight and understanding, as well as maybe getting a bit of hope for an eventual recovery. It was successful in that I learned something of the many ways in which psychosomatic illness manifests, but the prognosis was less encouraging. It does seem, however, that we do need to encourage her to consider psychotherapy, assuming that the overstretched NHS is able to offer it. I’m glad I read this, even though I still have fears for what the future may hold.
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Loaf Life to the Full
2.0 out of 5 stars Can the imagination give rise to unverifiable claims about the power of the imagination?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 1 July 2015
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O'Sullivan's inclusion of ME/CFS in a book about what she has chosen to term "imaginary" illnesses was always going to be controversial. More than that, it was always going to mean that the significance and plausibility of whatever else she wanted to discuss would inevitably find itself undermined. This is a pity, but it only takes one obtrusive weakness in a book to fatally undermine a reader's confidence in the rest.

Let us examine O'Sullivan's statement on p.238:

"I will not be obtuse. I believe that psychological factors and behavioural issues, if they are not the entire cause, at the very least contribute in a significant way to prolonging the disability that occurs in chronic fatigue syndrome."

Leaving aside O'Sullivan's clearly unusual understanding of the word "obtuse", this is disagreeably woolly. If, as she seems to acknowledge, there is a possibility that psychological factors and behavioural issues are not the entire cause of ME/CFS, why is there no call from her in her book for science to investigate the other contributing causes?

The hole in her argument gets bigger still. Stating that psychological factors and behavioural issues "at the very least contribute in a significant way to prolonging the disability that occurs in chronic fatigue syndrome" opens things wide open for any clear-thinking person to object that this is tantamount to saying that psychological factors and behavioural issues may not be a cause at all, and we are indeed justified in saying we need to look elsewhere.

I'm prepared to accept that O'Sullivan's thesis on ME/CFS is well meant, and that she has her patients' interests at heart; what is difficult to accept is that O'Sullivan has made anything approaching a strong, or even coherent, case for a psychological basis for ME/CFS.

In fact her arguments, such as they are, in favour of a psychological basis for ME/CFS are not shared by some of the world's leading researchers into ME/CFS, researchers whom I call "leading" not simply because I believe they are more enlightened than O'Sullivan, but because they have considerably more experience of the condition than O'Sullivan does - of how it presents clinically, how it affects patients' lives, and what biological investigations so far can tell us about it.

As long ago as 2006, Dr. Anthony Komaroff, CFS clinician and researcher at Harvard Medical School, told us:
"There are now over 4,000 published studies that show underlying biological abnormalities in patients with this illness. It's not an illness that people can just imagine that they have, and it's not a psychological illness. In my view, that debate, which has raged for 20 years, should now be over."

On 25th Feb. 2015, Mady Hornig MD, director of translational research at the Center for Infection and Immunity and associate professor of Epidemiology at Columbia's Mailman School, said:
"We now have evidence confirming what millions of people with this disease already know, that ME/CFS isn't psychological."

Shortly before this, on 10th February 2015, Ellen Wright Clayton, professor of pediatrics and law at Vanderbilt University, who chaired the committee of the Institute of Medicine, the health arm of the National Academy of Sciences, had this to say following publication of the IOM's groundbreaking 300 page report into the condition:
"We just needed to put to rest, once and for all, the idea that this is just psychosomatic or that people were making this up, or that they were just lazy."

O'Sullivan has unfortunately chosen to side with very different company, as evidenced by her allusive (she doesn't mention him by name) eulogy of Simon Wessely, whom she credits with being someone who "devised the most effective treatment programme for sufferers"...and is "the person in the UK who has taken this illness the most seriously, and who has devoted much of his career to solving the riddle". To many patients, and many of the scientists involved with ME/CFS, this must read like satire, since an opposing and far more prevalent view is that Mr Wessely's insistence on the psychological underpinnings of ME/CFS has caused unncecessary suffering on an epic scale as well as stifled wholly justifiable biomedical research into the condition for decades.

We have not reached the end of the saga of ME/CFS. We still understand precious little about it. But anyone with a genuinely scientific spirit of inquiry will have reached the end of that long and lurid chapter promoting ME/CFS as a psychological disorder and have realised that no evidence the psychiatrists have yet presented to us in their unaccountably lengthy hegemony can seriously demonstrate that it is one, and on the contrary the evidence is mounting that it is a physical disease after all. It is time - it has long been time - to move on.
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Helengo
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent insightful account of a delicate subject of functional disorders
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 20 January 2022
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As healthcare professionals my husband and I listened to the audiobooks and have encouraged our medical friends to read it. The neurologist shines a light on functional illnesses with compassion using case studies, giving support to sufferers that they are not 'faking it' when their symptoms have no organic cause. She guides the reader through the turmoil that the sufferer and their families endure, and the challenge that functional disorders pose to the medical profession, giving validation to both sides of the consulting room desk.
A very informative read.
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NFruit
1.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but it will not benefit patients.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 7 November 2015
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A look at the other one-star reviews will soon show that this book has offended many people suffering from M.E./chronic fatigue but I doubt that they are alone. It is likely to offend many others presenting with so-called “medically unexplained symptoms” as well as many health professionals and others who value evidence-based medicine. I am one such health professional.

The original title of the book - 'It's all in your head: true stories of imaginary illness' - and the picture on the front cover were surely intended to be provocative but they were also bound to offend. “It’s all in your head” grossly oversimplifies the complexity of brain-body interactions. As for “imaginary illness”, Dr O’Sullivan herself makes the distinction between “illness” (what the patient experiences) and “disease” (“a biological dysfunction of the body”). Her book is about diseases which she judges to be imaginary so she could justifiably have subtitled her book “True stories of Imaginary disease”. I, and other health professionals, would still question that but at least she would not be denying and dismissing the very real experiences of patients. Surely too the picture of a “cracked” egg is insensitive. The new title is a definite improvement.

Many of the more positive reviews rightly commend the book for its readability and because the stories are interesting. There is some humanity as well but there are too many uncomfortable accounts of mocking health professionals and Dr O’Sullivan is honest enough to include herself in some of these. As the book progresses, it becomes apparent that she has learned to be more tolerant of and caring towards these "psychosomatic" patients because she believes them to be psychologically unwell. However, it is also clear that she continues to view them as undeserving of her medical or neurological expertise.

I really struggle to understand how this book can be described as “well researched”. Dr O’Sullivan provides only a limited amount of flimsy and circumstantial evidence to show that her patients’ symptoms are caused by psychological issues. The fact that a patient’s seizures diminish while s/he is in hospital does not prove that there is a psychological basis and nor does the presence of a stressful life event in the patient’s history. How many of us have experienced significant life stress? Dr O’Sullivan doesn’t even follow-up her patients to see what happened to them after their visits to mental health professionals. She believes that this road will lead to recovery but she provides scant evidence of this.

Dr O’Sullivan doesn’t cite research to support her view that psychological therapies hold the key to patients’ “medically unexplained symptoms” or “psychosomatic illnesses”. Instead, she supports her own opinions by referring to the writings of clinicians such as Charcot, Breuer, Janet and Freud. They too published interesting case-studies but they were writing at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. They did not carry out research. Dr O’Sullivan doesn’t even cite contemporary psychoanalysts and she presents no research evidence to support her conviction that “psychosomatic disorders are physical symptoms that mask emotional distress”. Furthermore, she lumps together patients with medically unexplained conditions and patients who fabricate symptoms.

As Dr O’Sullivan rightly points out, blushing shows that emotions can impact on the workings of the body. However, that does not prove that emotions can be the sole cause of enduring and life-changing medical conditions as she asserts. She is right to recognise that emotional distress is important and medically significant but I hope that she has seen that when working with patients diagnosed with epilepsy, MS and motor neurone disease. She is right too to make a plea for greater recognition for psychiatrists and psychologists in medical settings. She fails to show any recognition, however, that good medical AND good psychological care is needed whether a patient’s medical condition is diagnosed or undiagnosed. This is a book that harks back to the 19th century. It does not belong in the 21st century.
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SD from Letchworth Garden City
3.0 out of 5 stars A great taster book into a subject matter - but no bibliography; studies mentioned are not listed
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 16 June 2015
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I bought the book because I saw an interview with Dr Suzanne O'Sullivan. I had never heard about this fascinating subject before.
It was moving to read about Dr O'Sullivan's individual patients. - But why did Dr O'Sullivan chose so many cases where there is no 'outcome'? The men and women introduced flashed by like comets - with neither past nor future.
Dr O'Sullivan introduces us to the history of 'psychosomatic illness'. But those text book bits are much more tricky to read; text book bits and patients' stories don't seem properly joined together.

Why is there no bibliography and why are there no footnotes? This really annoyed me.
If you use statistics and quote from international studies I really expect the sources to be listed somewhere in the book. If you want to read more about the subject you simply need that information. This should be corrected in the paperback edition!

Sometimes you sense the impatience and the frustration of a doctor with a patient very clearly. But you also learn how a doctor began to see patients, after many years of experience, in a new light.

The book shows that the patient must be seen as a whole as well as in context of his/ her family, relationships and experiences:
The history of the patient as well as the history of the family is very important to find the causes for problems.

The last chapter with the case of Camilla was probably the most eye-opening one for me. If Camilla had been the first patient in the book it would have helped me to access the subject more easily.

I wonder why neurologists do not create systems where they accompany their patients from the START with psychiatrists and psychologists? The statistics quoted in the book suggest that it would not be a waste of money. But of course I wonder: Are these patients affected directly by the funding crisis in mental health in this country?

I recommend the book as a taster into the subject matter. It will leave you with many questions and you want to know more. I am not familiar with the various illnesses mentioned, I was more interested in the process of discovering a 'psychosomatic' illness.
I will read the book again trying to get into the minds of patients - and doctors.
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