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Jon Stone a University Department of Clinical Neurosciences,
Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, b University
Department of Psychiatry, Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Edinburgh EH10
5HF Correspondence to: J
Stone jstone{at}skull.dcn.ed.ac.uk
Most doctors make a diagnosis and offer treatment to
patients whose symptoms turn out to be unexplained by
disease.1 In such cases a diagnostic label is important in
signifying to the patient and family that the doctor is taking the
problem seriously and accepts the complaints as real. Some diagnostic
labels, particularly those that sound "psychological," can be
perceived by patients as offensive by implying that the patients are
"putting on" or "imagining" their symptoms or that they are
"mad."2
Various potentially suitable diagnoses are available to doctors.
"Hysteria" was the traditional term and is still sometimes used.
"Functional nervous disorder" was used in the late 19th century to
denote symptoms arising from disordered nervous
functioning,3 but in the 20th century this was superseded
by terms that implied psychogenesis, such as
psychosomatic.4 In the past 20 years more neutral
descriptive terms such as "medically unexplained symptoms" have
gained in popularity.1
Despite their importance in the doctor-patient relationship, the
implications to patients of these labels have received remarkably little attention. We explored the differing connotations and potential offensiveness of 10 different medical labels for the symptom of weakness.
The study received local research ethics approval. Two medical
students (WW and DD) interviewed 86 consecutive new patients attending
a general neurology outpatient clinic in Edinburgh, before patients saw
the doctor. Twenty four other patients declined to take part (most
because they were in a hurry), and three further interviews were
incomplete. We asked patients, "If you had leg weakness, your tests
were normal, and a doctor said you had [diagnosis] X, would he or she
be suggesting [implication] Y?" The table shows the 10 diagnostic
labels for weakness (X) and five potential connotations (Y). We coded
patients' responses "yes," "no," or "don't know" for each
diagnosis and each connotation.
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Participants, methods, and results
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Participants, methods, and...
Comment
References
that is, number of patients
who would have to be given this diagnostic label before one patient is
"offended"
The diagnoses of multiple sclerosis and stroke always had fewest
negative connotations and "symptoms all in the mind" the most. The
diagnoses ranked in between were of greater interest. We calculated an
"offence score" for each diagnosis as the proportion of patients
who endorsed one or more of the following connotations, which we deemed
offensive: "putting it on," being "mad," or "imagining symptoms." We then used this value to calculate a "number needed to
offend"
that is, the number of patients who can be given this diagnosis before one patient is offended (see figure on bmj.com). This
value assumes an ideal world in which no one is ever offended, and we
used standard calculations for number needed to treat.5 A
comparison of "medically unexplained weakness" and "functional weakness," two of the most popular labels in use, revealed that "functional" was much less offensive (P<0.05 for all categories of
negative connotation, McNemar's test).
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Comment |
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Many diagnostic labels that are used for symptoms unexplained by disease have the potential to offend patients. Although "medically unexplained" is scientifically neutral, it had surprisingly negative connotations for patients. Conversely, although doctors may think the term "functional" is pejorative,6 patients did not perceive it as such. As expected, "hysterical" had such bad connotations that its continued use is hard to justify, although it is the only term in this list that specifically excludes malingering.
Diagnostic labels have to be not only helpful to doctors but also
acceptable to patients. Many of the available labels did not pass this
basic test, but "functional" (in its original sense of altered
functioning of the nervous system3) did. This label has
the advantage of avoiding the "non-diagnosis" of "medically unexplained" and side steps the unhelpful psychological versus physical dichotomy implied by many other labels. It also provides a
rationale for pharmacological, behavioural, and psychological treatments aimed at restoring normal functioning of the nervous system.4 We call for the rehabilitation of
"functional" as a useful and acceptable diagnosis for physical
symptoms unexplained by disease.
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: JS developed the study and discussed core ideas with AC, MS, and CPW. WW, DD, SL and LM collected data and participated in data analysis. All authors contributed to writing the paper. MS is the guarantor.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
A figure appears on bmj.com
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References |
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| 1. |
Reid S, Wessely S, Crayford T, Hotopf M.
Medically unexplained symptoms in frequent attenders of secondary health care: retrospective cohort study.
BMJ
2001;
322:
767-771 |
| 2. | Wessely S. To tell or not to tell? The problem of medically unexplained symptoms. In: Zeman A, Emmanuel L, eds. Ethical dilemmas in neurology. London: Saunders, 2000:41-53. |
| 3. | Trimble MR. Functional diseases. BMJ 1982; 285: 1768-1770. |
| 4. |
Sharpe M, Carson AJ.
"Unexplained" somatic symptoms, functional syndromes, and somatization: do we need a paradigm shift?
Ann Intern Med
2001;
134:
926-930 |
| 5. |
Cook RJ, Sackett DL.
The number needed to treat: a clinically useful measure of treatment effect.
BMJ
1995;
310:
452-454 |
| 6. | Mace CJ, Trimble MR. "Hysteria", "functional" or "psychogenic"? A survey of British neurologists' preferences. J Roy Soc Med 1984; 84: 471-475[Abstract]. |
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