Abstract

The Infectious Disease Society of America, American Academy of Neurology, and American Academy of Rheumatology jointly proposed Lyme disease guidelines. Four areas most relevant to psychiatry were reviewed—the disclaimer, laboratory testing, and adult and pediatric psychiatric sections. The disclaimer and the manner in which these guidelines are implemented are insufficient to remove the authors and sponsoring organizations from liability for harm caused by these guidelines. The guidelines and supporting citations place improper credibility upon surveillance case definition rather than clinical diagnosis criteria. The guidelines fail to address the clear causal association between Lyme disease and psychiatric illnesses, suicide, violence, developmental disabilities and substance abuse despite significant supporting evidence. If these guidelines are published without very major revisions, and if the sponsoring medical societies attempt to enforce these guidelines as a standard of care, it will directly contribute to increasing a national and global epidemic of psychiatric illnesses, suicide, violence, substance abuse and developmental disabilities and the associated economic and non-economic societal burdens. The guideline flaws could be improved with a more appropriate disclaimer, an evidence-based rather than an evidence-biased approach, more accurate diagnostic criteria, and recognition of the direct and serious causal association between Lyme disease and psychiatric illnesses.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA), in combination with the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) and the American Academy of Rheumatology (AAR) draft guidelines were recently temporarily released for public comment in 2019 [1]

  • The guidelines fail to address the clear causal association between Lyme disease and psychiatric illnesses, suicide, violence, developmental disabilities and substance abuse despite significant supporting evidence. If these guidelines are published without very major revisions, and if the sponsoring medical societies attempt to enforce these guidelines as a standard of care, it will directly contribute to increasing a national and global epidemic of psychiatric illnesses, suicide, violence, substance abuse and developmental disabilities and the associated economic and non-economic societal burdens

  • The Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA), in combination with the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) and the American Academy of Rheumatology (AAR) draft guidelines were recently temporarily released for public comment in 2019 [1]

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Summary

Introduction

The Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA), in combination with the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) and the American Academy of Rheumatology (AAR) draft guidelines were recently temporarily released for public comment in 2019 [1]. The current draft contains a section on adult patients with psychiatric illness and children with developmental, behavioral or psychiatric disorders. The United States is experiencing an epidemic of increasing mental illness, suicide, violence, substance abuse and developmental disabilities in children, and many are questioning why this is occurring [2]. There is increasing recognition that infections and chronic tick-borne infections are contributing significantly to a burden of mental illness, suicide, violence, developmental disabilities in children and substance abuse [3]. A review of the causal association between Lyme disease and Healthcare 2019, 7, 105; doi:10.3390/healthcare7030105 www.mdpi.com/journal/healthcare

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