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Patients to DHHS: Cancel the IOM Contract!

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Gabby (Nielk) reviews the shennanigans employed by the DHHS recently to try and blindside us with a new clinical definition for our disease; and explains how you can help stop them...

International Call for Action: Your community needs you!

Everyone: please email HHS today and every day till September 30th - see draft below

US Citizens: please email your Congressional representatives - see instructions below


Kathleen Sebelius
US Secretary of Health and Human Services

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) describes itself as "the United States government’s principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially for those who are least able to help themselves.

The HHS is charged by the US government to serve and protect us, the estimated one million patients in the US suffering from the debilitating and complex disease known as ME/CFS.

Yet the recent action by HHS has been one of deceit.

We deserve and should expect fair representation, transparency and accountability but this is very far from what we have seen exhibited by the HHS in its most recent shenanigans.

The HHS has failed to act in good faith and we need now to take affirmative action in response to its potentially dangerous decision to appoint the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to independently develop recommendations for a new clinical case definition.

We are the victims of a 'bait and switch'

The bait
In October 2012, the CFS Advisory Committe (CFSAC) advanced the reasonable recommendation that HHS convene a workshop of ME/CFS expert clinicians, researchers and advocates to act in consultation with CFSAC members, and work on a case definition taking the 2003 Canadian Consensus Criteria as a starting point.

Nancy Lee, Designated Federal Officer, stated at this meeting:

“In general, the Federal Government isn’t in the position of telling doctors a case definition. I think a recommendation from CFSAC that the Secretary should tell people to use “X” definition will go nowhere because that’s not what we do. This is a clinical decision that has to come from the clinical community...

I’ve been in two or three meetings with the Secretary since I’ve been here. One of them was around this: the idea of a case definition, the need for one, and in addition, the need for a different name for the disease. She basically said that this has to be coming from the medical community.”

The switch
HHS refused to adhere to the recommendation from CFSAC, as was heatedly debated at the May, 2013 meeting. Then, on August 27, without any consultation from ME/CFS stakeholders or CFSAC members, HHS announced a sole solicitation to the Institute of Medicine (IOM) for a Study on Diagnostic Criteria for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.”

You might ask: “What's wrong with that? They are working on a case definition, which is what we asked for, isn't it?” And that is where the “switch” comes in to play.

Instead of complying with the reasonable recommendation from CFSAC, HHS took the “bait” that we thought was reasonable — the proposal to work on a better case definition — and then switched it all around in order to fit their own agenda.

Gone are the expert clinicians, researchers and patient advocates.

Gone is the consultation.

The Department of Health and Human Services in their wisdom have chosen to use non-experts to redefine our disease.​

Case history: IOM redefines Gulf War Illness

There has been much concern relating to the stories surrounding the involvement of the Institute Of Medicine in relation to Gulf War Illness (GWI). In January the IOM issued a report, “Gulf War and Health: Treatment for Chronic Multisymptom Illness” which served to redefine the disease.

This new creation, Chronic Multisymptom Illness, muddied the patient cohort and in the words of Anthony Hardie, Gulf War veteran, GWI patient and member of the VA Gulf War Research Steering Committee, it “defined [the disease] so broadly as to include nearly any human.”

The panel at IOM that worked on this redefinition of GWI had only one member with any experience of the condition and a few members were psychologists. One USA Today article back in June quoted Hardie as asking why the Institute of Medicine panel should include experts in psychosomatic illness. He rightly asked:

“Why are there people on a panel that has nothing to do with their expertise? To me as a veteran, that's insulting.”

The act of subterfuge

The action taken by HHS to solicit the IOM came as a complete surprise to all ME/CFS stakeholders. There was no mention that any of this was in the works at the last CFSAC meeting in May of this year. This sudden decision brought a great outcry from advocates, patients, CFSAC members and expert clinicians.

I have consulted with several CFSAC members who expressed no previous knowledge of this action by HHS. Dr Susan Levine, together with other CFSAC members and Dr Nancy Klimas, wrote to HHS entreating them to:

“...only enlist the expert members of our committee and/or other clinicians and researchers well known in the CFS/ME community to provide recommendations towards establishing an ever evolving case definition for this condition.

For now, however, the CCC [Canadian Consensus Criteria] provides an accurate foundation for the state of the art CFS/ME research as it stands at this moment.

All of us who currently serve on CFSAC are committed members of the CFS/ME clinician and research community and have spent, in many cases, most of our professional lives treating patients or performing in depth research as to the cause(s) and pathophysiology of this disorder.”

And then, much to the ME/CFS community's delight, on September 4, HHS announced that due to the groundswell of dissatisfaction, it had cancelled its original decision, stating that:

“Because of all of the concern from the public surrounding this potential sole source requisition, we have decided to discontinue this request.”

But then we were left:

Gobsmacked!

Despite this previous outcry from advocates and patients, and letters from CFSAC members as well as clinicians, and its own declaration not to make the request to the Institute of Medicine, HHS announced on September 12, via email on the CFSAC listserv, that it would indeed continue with plans to contract with IOM to develop clinical criteria for ME/CFS:

“We continue to work on a contract with the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to develop recommendations for clinical diagnostic criteria.

When the contract is finalized, we will provide additional information via the CFSAC listserv and website.

This topic will be included as an agenda item for the November webinar.”

Reliable sources have told us that, despite what HHS had originally stated, it really is pushing through with its agenda and will finalize and sign a contract with the Institute of Medicine (IOM) ahead of the next scheduled CFSAC meeting, and by September 30.

Patience exhausted...

Mary Schweitzer in her blog Slightly Alive, on 16 September, was clear on who should be constituting any advisory committee:

“Our position remains that it is currently active ME and CFIDS specialists and clinicians who should be drawing up that new definition. Like the ones on CFSAC. Not, well, strangers.

They should put together a committee with John Chia (USC), Jose Montoya (Stanford), Dan Peterson (Simarron Institute), Lucinda Bateman (University of Utah), Alan and Kathleen Light (University of Utah), Nancy Klimas (Nova University), Paul Cheney, Maureen Hanson (Cornell), Gordon Broderick (University of Alberta), Charles Lapp (Duke), Anthony Komaroff (Harvard), Ben Natelson (New Jersey College of Medicine), Susan Levine, Ian Lipkin (Columbia), Derek Enlander (Mount Sinai, NYC) - and Chris Snell or Staci Stevens.
As a start. Not hired strangers.”

But as Jennie Spotila states so well in a recent blog post, Insult, Meet Injury:

“Join me in mourning the death of my faith in the process.

We have learned that HHS is not only continuing to pursue this contract, but that they have every intention of signing it by the end of the fiscal year on September 30th.

This is not fear mongering or over reaction. We have confirmation that this is true. Furthermore, HHS’s stated intention is to share information with the community only after the contract has been signed.”

Mary Dimmock in her article for ProHealth, 17 September, was adamant:

“The IOM contract is not only a waste of precious time and money. It is a threat to our very lives!

HHS needs to adopt a definition our experts have already created and use that definition to re-educate the medical community.

It needs to drive an aggressive and fully funded research campaign to validate biomarkers, understand the pathophysiology of the disease and identify treatment approaches.”

Immediate actions you can take to try and stop the latest IOM contract:
  • Send an email (from any country) to Secretary Sebelius every day to voice your opposition to this contract,
and,
  • If you are a US Citizen, please contact your representative in Congress.
Instructions on how to do both are below.

Finally,
  • Distribute this action alert to your networks and your family and friends, and urge them to join in.
We can and must stop HHS from redefining our disease!

If you have questions, then please contact MEACTNOW@yahoo.com.

Instructions for Emailing HHS

A template email is provided below. The heads of all HHS agencies are copied in, as is MEACTNOW@yahoo.com so that the number of messages sent can be tracked.
  • If you are using the sample email provided below, simply copy it into the body of your email message.
  • If you wish to personalize it, then add a sentence or two at the beginning of the letter.
  • Add your name, city and state (or country if you do not reside in the US) to the end of the letter.
  • Feel free to change the subject line from time to time to avoid spam filters.
  • Another tip: If you have more than one email account, use one on one day and the other on another.
TO: Kathleen.Sebelius@hhs.gov

CC: howard.koh@hhs.gov, txf2@cdc.gov, Tomfrieden@cdc.gov, Marilyn.Tavenner@cms.hhs.gov,

margaret.hamburg@fda.hhs.gov, Mary.Wakefield@hrsa.hhs.gov, collinsf@mail.nih.gov,

richard.kronick@hhs.gov, MEACTNOW@yahoo.com

Subject: Stop the IOM Contract to Redefine ME

Dear Secretary Sebelius,

I strongly urge HHS to abandon its plan to employ the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to define its own clinical diagnostic criteria for myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS).

Researchers and clinicians with years of experience in studying and treating this disease have already created peer-reviewed case definitions – the 2003 Canadian Consensus Criteria (CCC) and the 2011 ME International Consensus Criteria (ME-ICC), which used the CCC as its baseline. These definitions are supported by clinical guidelines for medical practitioners, guidelines also created by experts. These definitions are well regarded by patients, ME/CFS doctors, and ME/CFS researchers. The CCC has been successfully used both clinically and in research for years.

But rather than adopt these expertly defined disease criteria and their associated medical guidelines, HHS has promoted its own overly broad and inaccurate view of ME/CFS. HHS has questioned the hallmark symptoms of ME/CFS (e.g. Post-Exertional Malaise) and misrepresented the disease in its medical education literature. HHS has even unilaterally reclassified ME/CFS to be a subtype of chronic fatigue, in complete opposition to the standards set by the World Health Organization and all other countries that classify this illness as a neurological disease.

Now, HHS is intent on creating new criteria for ME/CFS using the IOM, an organization whose single effort to define a disease has been harshly criticized for redefining the disease too broadly and for using non-experts to define the disease. Repeating the error made in defining Gulf War Illness, HHS has stated its intent to use non-experts to define ME/CFS. This is a very serious concern for patients who face widespread disregard from the general medical and research community. Adding to these concerns, the description of ME/CFS in the January 2013 IOM report failed to accurately represent the illness, listing CBT and GET as treatments, treatments that experts have said can be harmful to ME/CFS patients.

HHS is going ahead with the IOM contract unilaterally, ignoring overwhelming opposition from the ME/CFS community. HHS is undermining the work of our experts while patients are suffering and dying. HHS must stop wasting precious time and dollars. HHS must stop wasting our precious lives.

I strongly urge HHS to abandon its plans to employ the IOM to define clinical diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS. It is time for HHS to adopt the Canadian or International Consensus Criteria and use that definition to drive an aggressive campaign of fully funded research and to reeducate the medical community.

Sincerely,

(Your name)

(Your city and state - or country)

US Citizens: How to contact Congress

Advocate Liz Willow has provided precise instructions and a message template for US citizens to contact their representative in Congress here.


Phoenix Rising is a registered 501 c.(3) non profit. We support ME/CFS and NEID patients through rigorous reporting, reliable information, effective advocacy and the provision of online services which empower patients and help them to cope with their isolation.

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22 September 2013
Note: Please be advised we have added clearer details on how to contact your Congressional representative to the above article with a link to the blog from Liz Willow.

View the Post on the Blog
 
Does anyone remember the name of the special liaison for ME/CFS to the President ?
I think that would be an excellent person to include.

Beaker
It was Nancy DeParle but she is gone.

I hear you on the forms. They do take more energy and are a pain. But the advantage is that the forms can make sure the comments get to the specific staffer who deals with health care issues since we dont know all of their email addresses. I spoke to a staffer last week in one of the senator's offices and she said that the use of the form makes it easier for her to see the issues that people are raising and puts her in a better position to help us.
Didn't anyone take DeParle's place ? If not, shouldn't we ask for someone to do so ?
Crud. Advocacy on top of advocacy.
 
Re the Dept of Veteran Affairs website (see the above link), it states:
A prominent condition affecting Gulf War Veterans is a cluster of medically unexplained chronic symptoms that can include fatigue, headaches, joint pain, indigestion, insomnia, dizziness, respiratory disorders, and memory problems.

VA refers to these illnesses as "chronic multisymptom illness" and "undiagnosed illnesses." We prefer not to use the term “Gulf War Syndrome” when referring to medically unexplained symptoms reported by Gulf War Veterans. Why? Because symptoms vary widely.

In the last paragraph, if we replace 'Gulf War Syndrome' with 'CFS/ME', then perhaps that indicates what we could expect from a similar consultation for CFS/ME. For example:
We refer to these illnesses as "chronic multisymptom illness" and "undiagnosed illnesses." We prefer not to use the term “CFS/ME” when referring to medically unexplained symptoms reported by patients. Why? Because symptoms vary widely.

A panel of non-experts will consider the vast amount of psychological research literature, and may well conclude that there is no agreement about the nature of CFS/ME; that there is a wide range of symptoms; and 'functional' (i.e. cognitive-behavioural) issues may play a role in perpetuating the illness for at least a subset of patients.
 
Snow Leopard
Hmmm indeed. The focus on grouping everything together as medically unexplained illness is too reminiscent of the approach HHS is taking. In a response to the May 2013 advocate request to adopt the CCC, Dr. Unger stated
"CDC will continue to engage CFSAC, public health partners, and patient advocates in the development of control and prevention strategies to reduce the morbidity associated with CFS and to improve the quality of life of persons with CFS and other similar medically unexplained chronically fatiguing illnesses such as ME, fibromyalgia syndrome, neurasthenia, multiple chemical sensitivities, and chronic mononucleosis."


A panel of non-experts will consider the vast amount of psychological research, and may well conclude that there is no agreement about the nature of CFS/ME; that there is a wide range of symptoms; and 'functional' (i.e. cognitive-behavioural) issues may play a role in perpetuating the illness for at least a subset of patients.

Agree - especially if they focus on a literature review as in the CMI definition initiative.

Keep writing those letters. And if you are U.S. residents, please consider sending an email to your senators and congressional representative. Simple directions and a sample letter can be found here on Liz WIllow's blog and also here
 
Snow Leopard

Hmmm indeed. The focus on grouping everything together as medically unexplained illness is too reminiscent of the approach HHS is taking. In a response to the May 2013 advocate request to adopt the CCC, Dr. Unger stated
"CDC will continue to engage CFSAC, public health partners, and patient advocates in the development of control and prevention strategies to reduce the morbidity associated with CFS and to improve the quality of life of persons with CFS and other similar medically unexplained chronically fatiguing illnesses such as ME, fibromyalgia syndrome, neurasthenia, multiple chemical sensitivities, and chronic mononucleosis."


Doesn't look great.
 
"the Dept of Veteran Affairs website (see the above link), it states:



A prominent condition affecting Gulf War Veterans is a cluster of medically unexplained chronic symptoms that can include fatigue, headaches, joint pain, indigestion, insomnia, dizziness, respiratory disorders, and memory problems.

VA refers to these illnesses as "chronic multisymptom illness" and "undiagnosed illnesses." We prefer not to use the term “Gulf War Syndrome” when referring to medically unexplained symptoms reported by Gulf War Veterans. Why? Because symptoms vary widely."

That makes me wonder if they want to get the "Gulf War Syndrome" name out of the picture as it envokes too much public sympathy. So give it a crappy name and help to try to make the illness vanish some by also washing down the definition.

Wonder if they have lessons on "how to make an illness disappear" cause those doing these things seem to be experts at what they do and unfortunately the patient group still has to catch up with the sly tactics that is played with us by those high up.
 
I hope you will provide additional info, but I seem to remember hearing that some years ago Reeves (?) referred to ME(cfs) as Chronic Multisymptom Illness.
This CDC definition for Chronic Multisymptom Illness, with significant CFS overlap, was developed in 1998 to classify cases of Gulf War Illness:
One or more chronic (more than 6 months) symptoms from two of the following categories:
  • Fatigue
  • Mood and cognition (depression, difficulty concentrating, moodiness, anxiety, word-finding
    difficulties, sleep disturbance)
  • Musculoskeletal (joint pain, joint stiffness, muscle pain)
The CDC further classified patients by severity of illness (mild-moderate or severe). Compared to military personnel who were not deployed to the Persian Gulf, veterans who served in the Gulf War were 8.6 times more likely to have "severe" illness and 2.8 times more likely to have "mild-moderate" illness. Most of those who met the definition for "severe" illness also met the case definition for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Although women were a minority of the Gulf force, females were statistically more likely than males to have GWI.

Overlap with CFS
Rates of chronic multi-symptom illness and CFS are very similar in the general public and non-Gulf War military personnel. However in Gulf War veterans the rates are considerably higher, especially those for "severe" illness, which the CDC has found overlaps with CFS. CDC has called the Persian Gulf War the first documented cluster outbreak of chronic fatigue syndrome.
 
Was this 1998 definition ever published in the literature?
"Chronic Multisymptom Illness Affecting Air Force Veterans of the Gulf War" by Fukuda et al.:
ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT | METHODS | RESULTS | COMMENT | REFERENCES

Context.— Gulf War (GW) veterans report nonspecific symptoms significantly more often than their nondeployed peers. However, no specific disorder has been identified, and the etiologic basis and clinical significance of their symptoms remain unclear.

Objectives.— To organize symptoms reported by US Air Force GW veterans into a case definition, to characterize clinical features, and to evaluate risk factors.

Design.— Cross-sectional population survey of individual characteristics and symptoms and clinical evaluation (including a structured interview, the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36, psychiatric screening, physical examination, clinical laboratory tests, and serologic assays for antibodies against viruses, rickettsia, parasites, and bacteria) conducted in 1995.

Participants and Setting.— The cross-sectional questionnaire survey included 3723 currently active volunteers, irrespective of health status or GW participation, from 4 air force populations.The cross-sectional clinical evaluation included 158 GW veterans from one unit, irrespective of health status.

Main Outcome Measures.— Symptom-based case definition; case prevalence rate for GW veterans and nondeployed personnel; clinical and laboratory findings among veterans who met the case definition.

Results.— We defined a case as having 1 or more chronic symptoms from at least 2 of 3 categories (fatigue, mood-cognition, and musculoskeletal). The prevalence of mild-to-moderate and severe cases was 39% and 6%, respectively, among 1155 GW veterans compared with 14% and 0.7% among 2520 nondeployed personnel. Illness was not associated with time or place of deployment or with duties during the war. Fifty-nine clinically evaluated GW veterans (37%) were noncases, 86 (54%) mild-to-moderate cases, and 13 (8%) severe cases. Although no physical examination, laboratory, or serologic findings identified cases, veterans who met the case definition had significantly diminished functioning and well-being.

Conclusions.— Among currently active members of 4 Air Force populations, a chronic multisymptom condition was significantly associated with deployment to the GW. The condition was not associated with specific GW exposures and also affected nondeployed personnel.
 
This part, "The condition was not associated with specific GW exposures and also affected nondeployed personnel." is troubling and intriguing. Did nondeployed personnel get the same immunizations? What other common factor could there be? I admit that until I read that sentence I had assumed it was all from exposure to depleted uranium dust, and only confined to deployed personnel.