Friday, 8 March 2013

Doctors Dropping the Ball: Why Fibro Patients Should Be Worried


People still tell me I was crazy. But way back in 1989, my wife and I, just married, packed up and left sunny California to move to Canada, the land of ice and snow. I had just spent a year working as a private Internal Medicine specialist, but now was returning to do two years of training to become a Rheumatologist, an arthritis specialist. Meanwhile, my wife was returning to school too, to further her training as a biochemist.

"But WHY Canada?" people asked us, thinking that this meant we were suddenly going to start living in igloos and eating whale blubber, and only speak some strange northern native language. To be honest, the main reason we were making the plunge (or should I say slide, since everyone knows Canadian waters are frozen 13 months every year) was that Donna and I both are Canadian, love Canada, and enjoy donuts. But another reason I looked forward to the move was that I heard that where I was going, they had specialized inpatient Rheumatology units, where patients with severe arthritis and sudden attacks of arthritis could be admitted for intensive treatment, including physiotherapy and pool therapy and so on. That seemed really progressive and patient-centred to me.  Soon after I arrived, I learned that, not only did they have a unit for arthritis patients, they also had 3 inpatient beds reserved for patients with fibromyalgia, to give them intensive therapy and education early in their illness, to help them feel as good as possible as quickly as possible.

But then things changed. I think it was about 1991 that University Hospital lost its three designated fibromyalgia patient beds. But no worries: to replace it, a nice new 2-week, intensive outpatient program was created. Of course, this made it difficult for fibro patients who lived out of town (just where do they stay during those 2 weeks?); but at least it was something.  Next to go, a couple of years later, were all the arthritis beds, so fibro patients could no longer even be squeezed into an arthritis bed.  But that was okay, because fibromyalgia patients still were being seen by most if not all the Rheumatologists in town. But then, that all changed. Sometime about five years ago, none of the Rheumatologists working out of the hospital were seeing fibro patients anymore.  A couple working in a community clinic and private office were. But at least everyone still had that wonderful and now well-established and perfected two week program.

I just found out that this program is now closing too. And this comes on the heels of a recently-published survey of Ontario (that's where I live) Rheumatologists, in which more than half (55%) said they felt fibromyalgia was MOSTLY a psychosomatic disease, and only one in four were even willing to see fibro patients anymore. This, to me, is both tragic and inexcusable. To begin with, as I clearly demonstrate in my book, Breaking thru the Fibro Fog: Scientific Proof Fibromyalgia Is Real, the evidence is now OVERWHELMING that fibro is a REAL PHYSICAL ILLNESS. In fact, it is a multi-systemic disease, which involves the central and peripheral nervous system, the autonomic nervous system, the immune system, the endocrine system (hormones), the gastrointestinal system and the cardiovascular system. In many ways, it is as complex as diseases like systemic lupus. 

The other way in which the disheartening results of this most recent poll are so horrific is that it was Rheumatologists who have been behind much of the positive research that has been done in this area. People with fibro and those who love them owe much gratitude to the likes of fibro pioneers like Hugh Smythe, Muhammad Yunus, Jon Russell, Robert Bennett, Dan Buskila and many, many others. Though they still advocate for those with fibro... what about all the other Rheumatologists? Don't they believe their colleagues anymore? Again, the research proving fibro is real should now be considered undeniable.

And so it is that next month I set off on tour again, starting in the UK where I have a series of talks. But I can't do this alone. Please send people to my website to learn more... there's lots of free information there, including a famous editorial I published in 2004 called Fibromyalgia: The Answer Is Blowin' in the Wind. In that article, I borrow two lines from the incomparable Bob Dylan's wonderful song:

How many times can a man turn his head, and pretend that he just doesn't see?
and...
How many ears must one man have before he can hear people cry?

It's time for people with fibromyalgia and those who love and support them to fight back. It is time for everyone who sufferers from this tragically-misunderstood disease to be seen and heard.

Kevin White, MD, PhD, multiple award-winning researcher, author, teacher & speaker

Monday, 4 February 2013

An Apology... and Upcoming Stuff

First of all, let me apologize to everyone who comes to this page to read my blogs. I haven't been writing much these past couple of months. That, I hope, is about to change.

I have been trying to set up a blog page on my actual website, to streamline everything, and have met a few roadblocks. I'm still trying, however, and should have it up and running shortly. Otherwise, I have been crazy busy.

Upcoming things/events are these:

Join me tomorrow morning, Tuesday February 5th, from 10:30 to 10:45 AM when I will be a guest speaker on 1330 WFIN Radio in Findlay, Ohio (a suburb of Toledo), with host Doug Jenkins. I'll be talking about how our lovely winter weather affects fibromyalgia and chronic pain in general. So sit by a warm fire and listen in. Online, the show is at



Join me next Sunday from 3 to 5 PM, when I will be interviewed by radio show host Sue Vogan on her show In Short Order. You can hear the interview at
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/in-short-order. I've done this show before and Sue is both a wonderful host and a tremendous advocate for those who suffer with chronic disease.  The show should be a lot of fun, as well as very informative.

Other news:  I am in the process of editing my second book about fibromyalgia. The tentative title (drum-roll please) is... 7 Secrets to Getting/Giving Better Care for Fibromyalgia: Steps to an Effective Patient-Centered Approach. This book is based upon about 20 years of personal experience treating and researching fibromyalgia. And guess what... it'll be a fun, easy read because I made it so. I've even injected lots of humour (Laughter IS, after all, the best medicine). Expect this book to come out as an eBook at amazon.com within the next month or so (I'll keep you posted).

Also, I just had the extreme pleasure of meeting Thomas Hennessy Jr.  Who, you ask, is Thomas Hennessy Jr.? He, my fine feathered friends, is the founder of the Annual Fibromyalgia Awareness Day that occurs every May 12th. The man is a hot hire, let me tell you. Who he doesn't know would be a very short list. Check out his FaceBook page at


And one of the hundreds of songs I've written is apparently currently being reviewed by members of the Canadian Olympic Curling Team  for official use in promotion. That's kind of cool.

Finally, I WILL be writing another news-related blog real soon. Did you know that now, 55% of Rheumatologists believe fibromyalgia is mostly psychosomatic? And 71% feel that Rheumatologists should no longer see fibro patients. That will be the main topic of my next blog, which I hope to post later this week.

Again, I apologize for writing so infrequently lately. I hope to have a few more blogs posted in the next few weeks.