Chronic fatigue syndrome: labels, meanings and consequences.
Wojcik, Wojtek, Armstrong, David, Kanaan, Richard · Journal of psychosomatic research · 2011 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study surveyed British neurologists to understand how they view ME/CFS and whether they consider it a neurological condition. The results revealed that 84% of neurologists did not view ME/CFS as a neurological disorder, even though it is officially classified as one in the ICD-10 medical coding system. The researchers discuss how the way we label and classify ME/CFS affects how doctors treat patients and how patients understand their own illness.
Why It Matters
This study highlights a critical gap between official medical classification and actual clinical practice among neurologists—the very specialists who should be diagnosing ME/CFS. Understanding these classification challenges helps explain why patients with ME/CFS may struggle to receive appropriate medical recognition and specialized care, and it identifies barriers to standardized diagnosis and treatment.
Observed Findings
84% of surveyed British neurologists did not view CFS as a neurological condition
Official ICD-10 classification of CFS exists but conflicts with majority clinical opinion among neurologists
Historical and sociological factors influence how doctors classify and understand ME/CFS
The physical/psychological dichotomy in medicine creates classification pitfalls for ME/CFS
Classification labels carry consequences for how doctors and patients understand the illness
Inferred Conclusions
There is significant misalignment between official medical classification systems and neurologists' actual clinical perspectives on ME/CFS
Classification of ME/CFS is complicated by conceptual frameworks that artificially separate physical and psychological causes
How we label and classify ME/CFS matters substantially for medical practice and patient outcomes
Better consensus-building around ME/CFS classification may be needed in the medical community
Remaining Questions
Why do neurologists reject the neurological classification of CFS? What specific evidence or reasoning shapes their views?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove whether ME/CFS is or is not neurological in nature; it only documents what neurologists believe. The survey findings do not establish causation or explain why neurologists hold these views, nor do they evaluate the validity of different classification systems. The study also does not assess whether neurologists' classification beliefs affect patient outcomes or quality of care.