• Disrupting Power Since 2015
  • Donate
  • Login
Sunday, May 11, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
Canary
MEDIA THAT DISRUPTS
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
MANAGE SUBSCRIPTION
SUPPORT
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
Canary
No Result
View All Result

Oxford NHS just re-gaslighted the entire ME community – and a charity rolled over and took it

Steve Topple by Steve Topple
22 September 2023
in Editorial, UK
Reading Time: 5 mins read
174 1
A A
1
Home Editorial
326
SHARES
2.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has issued an apology – of sorts – to charity the ME Association. It’s over an offensive job advert that angered people living with the chronic neuroimmune disease myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME). However, Oxford NHS’s ‘apology’ is barely that – and has actually done little more than re-gaslight a whole group of chronically ill disabled people.

Oxford NHS: one advert igniting a whole community

The Canary has been documenting the controversy over Oxford NHS’s job advert. It’s hiring a clinical psychologist. The role will be working in the ME service, and the renal and transplant medicine service. However, Oxford NHS said in the advert (since altered) that the role would involved working with patients who have:

difficulties in understanding (such as cognitive deficits, or unconscious denial of psychological conflicts), or overcoming communication difficulties with patient who are hostile, antagonistic, highly anxious or psychotic.

It would also involve dealing with:

verbal abuse and risk of physical aggression (for example from people with behavioural problems or enduring mental illness).

Of course, it goes without saying that people with ME aren’t ‘hostile’, ‘antagonistic’, ‘verbally abusive’, or ‘physically aggressive’ – generally because they live with an energy-limiting chronic illness that barely lets them do things like wash up or go out for a coffee, let alone kick off at psychologists.

Enter the ME Association

In short, as I previously wrote, Oxford NHS’s overall thinking implied:

that ME patients are ill because, at least in part, their illness is psychosomatic (“unconscious denial of psychological conflicts”) – and this needs to be clinically psychologised out of them.

So, the ME Association got involved. The charity wrote to Oxford NHS asking it to change the advert to “remove the offensive language”. Consultant clinical neuropsychologist at Oxford Dr Simon Prangnell replied to the ME Association. He said that the wording that caused offense was not about people with ME. It was there in case the post holder had to respond to “emergency situations not necessarily within their usual service”.

This still wasn’t good enough for the ME Association – and rightly so. It then wrote to the boss of the NHS trust. Now, Oxford NHS has replied – saying ‘sorry’, noting that it has changed the advert and “revised the wording”. And the new wording must be good, because the ME Association said that it will be writing back to “thank them for taking this action”. Surely, Oxford NHS must have got it right this time? Yes?

No, of course it bloody well didn’t.

Rewording, but still saying, the same shit

The Oxford NHS ad for a clinical psychologist still states, in relation to ME patients, that the post holder will have to deal with people who are:

highly emotionally charged (such as eliciting/discussing experiences of trauma or childhood abuse), and which may require managing difficulties in understanding (such as cognitive deficits, or unconscious denial of psychological conflicts)

And that the person will need to be:

Skilled at communicating with patients who may at times present as hostile or who are highly anxious or psychotic.

All Oxford NHS has done is put the part about patients being ‘verbally abusive’ or ‘physically aggressive’ in the context of:

exceptional circumstance (for example, when working with a person experiencing a mental health crisis or responding to an urgent / emergency situation)

So, people living with ME still:

  • Have unconscious denial of psychological conflicts – implying that ‘the illness is all in people’s heads’.
  • Are “hostile”, “highly anxious”, and/or “psychotic” – implying that ‘the illness…’ etc etc.

Moreover, they’ve had some “childhood trauma” which is also causing their ME or making it worse. Although they may not remember it (probably because it never bloody happened), it is definitely somewhere at the root of their post-viral illness and the multitude of symptoms this causes. ‘The illness is all in people’s heads AND it’s their parent’s fault’.

ME: round in circles we go

How the ME Association thought the appropriate response to this re-gaslighting of the people it’s supposed to represent was to grovel and say ‘thanks’ to Oxford NHS is anyone’s guess – because even the letter from the trust to it was deviously worded and obtuse.

Oxford NHS said that:

The Trust did not intend to imply that all people [with ME] experience severe mental health conditions such as psychosis, or that all individuals would present with challenging behaviour.

In other words, people with ME aren’t ALL psychotic – just some of them are! They don’t ALL have challenging behaviour – just some of them do! Unless I’m missing something, this is the implication of Oxford NHS’s words: the words that the ME Association accepted as a sufficient apology.

All of this is unsurprising, given – as I previously wrote – Oxford NHS is a hotbed of crank psychiatrists desperately applying their fraudulent, pseudo-scientific ideas to a physical illness.

So, round in circles we go. After decades of abuse and neglect, an NHS trust repeatedly gaslights patients (while ignoring a wealth of actual science), and a charity (who said patients pay money to, to advocate for them) rolls over and takes it. Not good enough, in any way, shape, or form – given that just this week I reported on another ME patient dying while the NHS neglects her – but not surprising, either.

Once again it’s marginalised, chronically ill disabled people who have to tolerate this shit – on top of tolerating an illness which leaves many of them more functionally impaired than even cancer or heart disease does. They should not accept this continued abuse from Oxford NHS – and nor should they accept the ME Association’s simpering response, either.

Featured image via Alex E. Proimos – Wikimedia, resized to 770×403 under licence CC BY 2.0. the NHS – screengrab, and the ME Association – screengrab

Share130Tweet82
Previous Post

Police crack down on pro-democracy protests in Ghana’s capital

Next Post

Welsh government follows its Scottish counterparts in opposing the anti-boycott bill

Next Post
A BDS protest anti-boycott bill

Welsh government follows its Scottish counterparts in opposing the anti-boycott bill

Brighton University occupation at Pavilion Parade

While management hide, students occupy part of Brighton University campus in solidarity with staff

Sign for public footpaths in Chigwell

New research highlights strong correlations between race and class and accessibility to public footpaths

Placard from Ghana protests that says "As we speak... Ghana is a crime scene"

Claims of maltreatment by police in Ghana as anti-government protests continue for a second day

Letters to the Canary

Letters to the Canary: disbelief at Kuenssberg's 'State of Chaos', flooding, and Catalonia

Please login to join discussion
Protesters with Palestine flags and banners reading "Stop arming Israel" stand next to General Dynamics' sign.
News

Campaigners challenge Hastings Council over its complicity with Israel’s genocide in Gaza

by The Canary
9 May 2025
Women's cancers get 20% less funding than male cancers, despite much worse survival rates
News

Women’s cancers get 20% less funding than male cancers, despite much worse survival rates

by The Canary
9 May 2025
Labour 'seems intent on wielding scissors' to NHS as scale of budget shortfall revealed as £7bn this year
Analysis

Labour ‘seems intent on wielding scissors’ to NHS as scale of budget shortfall revealed

by Ed Sykes
9 May 2025
After the local elections, why don't politicians listen?
Opinion

After the local elections, why are politicians still not listening?

by Jamie Driscoll
9 May 2025
Labour MP Clive Lewis calls out worrying shadiness of US-UK tariff deal
Analysis

Labour MP Clive Lewis calls out worrying shadiness of US-UK tariff deal

by Ed Sykes
9 May 2025
  • Contact
  • About & FAQ
  • Get our Daily News Email
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

The Canary
PO Box 71199
LONDON
SE20 9EX

Canary Media Ltd – registered in England. Company registration number 09788095.

For guest posting, contact [email protected]

For other enquiries, contact: [email protected]

The Canary is owned and run by independent journalists and volunteers, NOT offshore billionaires.

You can write for us, or support us by making a regular or one-off donation.

© Canary Media Ltd 2024, all rights reserved | Website by Monster | Hosted by Krystal | Privacy Settings

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • UK
    • Global
    • Analysis
    • Trending
  • Editorial
  • Features
    • Features
    • Environment
    • Lifestyle
    • Health
    • Money
    • Science
    • Business
    • Tech
    • Travel
    • Sport & Gaming
  • Media
    • Video
    • Cartoons
  • Opinion

© 2023 Canary - Worker's co-op.

Before you go, have you seen...?

Protesters with Palestine flags and banners reading "Stop arming Israel" stand next to General Dynamics' sign.
News
The Canary

Campaigners challenge Hastings Council over its complicity with Israel’s genocide in Gaza

Women's cancers get 20% less funding than male cancers, despite much worse survival rates
News
The Canary

Women’s cancers get 20% less funding than male cancers, despite much worse survival rates

Labour 'seems intent on wielding scissors' to NHS as scale of budget shortfall revealed as £7bn this year
Analysis
Ed Sykes

Labour ‘seems intent on wielding scissors’ to NHS as scale of budget shortfall revealed

After the local elections, why don't politicians listen?
Opinion
Jamie Driscoll

After the local elections, why are politicians still not listening?

ADVERTISEMENT
Lifestyle
Nathan Spears

Why More People Are Seeking Legal Advice When Separating

Travel
Nathan Spears

Hungary Vignette Adventures: Discovering Hidden Gems by Car

How Social Media Affects the Mental Health of Young Adults Today
Tech
The Canary

How Social Media Affects the Mental Health of Young Adults Today