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20 Years of Caring

20 years anniversary Well folks it's twenty years since our organisation was founded in 1987.

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Latest News

Latest News Read the Latest News about ME/CFS, updated monthly.
Medical Advisors PDF Print E-mail
  • Professor Anthony J Pinching

    Professor Anthony Pinching

    Professor Anthony J Pinching has since 2003 been Associate Dean for Cornwall, and Professor of Clinical Immunology, in the Peninsula Medical School, with his base at the Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro. He trained in Medicine at Oxford, also gaining DPhil (in Neuroanatomy). After postgraduate training, he became Senior Lecturer, then Reader, in Clinical Immunology at St Mary's, and in 1992 took up the Louis Freedman Chair in Immunology at St Bartholomew's. His academic and clinical interests have included cellular immunology, autoimmunity (myasthenia gravis, vasculitis), immunodeficiency (especially HIV/AIDS), chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS/ME), and medical ethics. He was Deputy Chairman of CMO's CFS/ME Working Group, and was the Chairman of the Department of Health's CFS/ME Service Investment Steering Group. His clinical focus is now predominantly on CFS/ME.

  • Professor Leslie J Findley

    Dr Leslie J Findley

    Prof Findley is consultant neurologist and clinical lead at the Essex Neurosciences Unit at Queen's Hospital. He is also clinical lead for the Clinical Network Coordinating Centre overseeing the NHS Kent & Medway CFS/ME Service.

     

    Prof Findley received his undergraduate medical training at the University of Sheffield, graduating MB, ChB in 1968. Between 1973 and 1981 he undertook postgraduate training in neurology at the Institute of Neurology, London and St Mary's Hospital Medical School. He was appointed consultant neurologist at the Essex Neurosciences Unit in 1981. He was visiting consultant neurologist to Queen Elizabeth Military Hospital until its closure in 1991 and was appointed Professor of Health Sciences (Neurology) at University of London, South Bank in 1996. Prof Findley is the Clinical Director of a referral centre for patients with complex fatigue syndromes of all types. He has contributed to WHO and national guidelines on the subject of diagnosis and management of fatigue syndromes.

  • Dr Susie Rockwell

    Dr Susie Rockwell

    Dr Susie Rockwell has been an NHS GP at Portslade Health Centre since 1992 and is also a GP appraiser. She has been involved with commissioning while sitting as a member of the Professional Executive Committee of Brighton and Hove city PCT. She has an interest in CFS and has been on the steering group involved in setting up the new local service. She has trained in homeopathy at the Royal London Homeopathic hospital and has a small private homeopathic practice in Hove.

    She has completed a diploma in nutritional healing and has an interest in food intolerances. She has also done some training in basic CBT skills. Best to add that in between the line about homeopathy and the final line about my clinic and in that final line say I have a small private homeopathy and nutrition clinic in Hove.


  • Dr Keith Hine

    Dr Keith Hine
    Dr Keith Hine MD FRCP is an Honorary Consultant Physician at Brighton & Sussex University Hospitals. He is a General Physician with a special interest in diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. He also has a number of other roles including being an examiner for the General Medical Council Professional and Linguistics Advisory Board and an examiner for the Membership of the Royal College of Physicians. He is also an honorary visiting Professor to the Christian Medical College in Ludhiana, India and is on the Governing Body of that Hospital. Dr Hine has had an interest in CFS/ME since his appointment as a consultant in 1984. He is an ex-officio member of the Sussex wide CFS/ME Steering Group and has been a Medical Adviser to the Sussex ME Society since 1986.

  • Dr Alan Stewart

    Dr Alan Steward

    Dr Alan Stewart has specialised in a nutritional approach to illness for over the last 20 years since establishing his practice in Sussex in the early 1980's. He qualified from Guy's Hospital in 1976 and became a member of the Royal College of Physicians. He is the author of various popular books on nutrition, including "Nutritional Medicine" and "Tired all the time". He has particular interests in nutrition, assessment and diagnosis. At present he is writing a series of articles on the prevalence of nutritional deficiencies within the U.K. population as have been detailed in the recent National Diet and Nutrition Survey conducted by the Foods Standards Agency and the Department of Health. The results of this recently reported survey and their relationship to fatigue states will be covered in an in depth article in next quarter's newsletter.

  • Dr Mike BroughtonDr Mike Broughton

    Dr Mike Broughton qualified from Guy's Hospital in 1979 and after spells working in Canada and New Zealand he became a GP in West Sussex in 1986. He was a GP Trainer and Appraiser before leaving full time General Practice in 2003. He first became interested in CF/ME from 1987 onwards when he saw a series of patients with unexplained fatigue. He worked as Associate Specialist in CFS/ME at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in London with Professor Peter White and became Clinical Lead to the Sussex CFS/ME service in September 2005. He believes that CFS/ME is due to a neuro-endocrine disturbance of the central nervous system and that a variety of therapies can be helpful towards recovery.

  • Dr Kamal PatelDr Kamal Patel

    Consultant paediatrician at the Royal Alexandra Childrens Hospital in Brighton The situation continues to improve for many young people with CFS/ME. There is still some way to go, but in my professional life I have seen a large change. "When I were a lad" - a junior doctor - myalgic encephalitis was some mysterious illness, with accurate diagnosis and sound management only in the hands of a few healthcare professionals.The CMO CFS/ME report of 2002 and The Royal College of Child Health & Paediatrics Guidelines in 2004 have brought awareness into the mainstream. This will continue with the NICE guidelines.

 

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