Betting on Seabiscuit
Laura Hillenbrand beat the odds to write the hit horse-racing saga while fighting chronic fatigue syndrome, a mysterious disorder starting to reveal its secrets
- By Larry Katzenstein
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2002, Subscribe
(Page 8 of 9)
Wessely, the London-based psychiatrist and author, says graded-exercise therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy have helped some chronic fatigue patients for many months and even years beyond the initial treatment period. “They’re the best treatment approaches that we have now,” he says.
But some patient advocates have criticized the behavioral approach, saying it trivializes the affliction as psychological in origin. Kenney, of the CFS patients’ group, cautions that patients can’t just exercise the disorder away and may harm themselves if they carelessly try to do so. Wessely points out that the behavioral treatments have also helped people with clearly physical illnesses such as cancer and arthritis and insists that whether the cause of chronic fatigue syndrome is physical or psychological doesn’t matter.
“We always tell patients truthfully that we don’t know what caused their [chronic fatigue syndrome]—maybe they were stressed, maybe it was a virus. We say it’s like being in a hit-and-run accident: it’s happened, and that’s tough. Now, what can we do about it? We know that psychological factors such as depression can affect the outcome and so can physical factors like inactivity. And those we can change.”
Hillenbrand has begun seeing a therapist who takes a cognitive behavioral approach. “We’re talking about how I’m perceiving the illness and what my expectations are,” she says. “I don’t think I went into the illness with these problems, but over the years of being traumatized by chronic fatigue syndrome, you develop problems that make it harder for you to recover from it. I’m feeling a bit better, and I think ultimately the treatment will help me.”
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