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Email Campaign for Equal Funding at NIH!

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ProHealth is calling all ME/CFS patients to email demanding an increase in funding http://www.prohealth.com/me-cfs/library/showarticle.cfm?libid=20119

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Email addresses:

To: sylvia.burwell@hhs.gov, scheduling@hhs.gov, francis.collins@nih.gov, collinsf@od.nih.gov, brewera@od.nih.gov,

Cc: jarrettpublic@who.eop.gov, courtneymiller999@gmail.com

Subject Line: Equal Funding for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) Research

Dear Secretary Burwell and Dr. Collins:

I am disabled with ME/CFS, and I am writing to ask you to raise research funding for my disease to a level of $100 million annually, equal to illnesses like Multiple Sclerosis and Systemic Lupus.

I want to highlight two scientific reports commissioned by HHS that were released in the last two months by independent experts. They say the same thing: "The committee stresses that more research is urgently needed."

The Institute of Medicine, an arm of the widely respected National Academy of Sciences, and National Institutes of Health's own Pathways to Prevention Program have issued urgent calls to federal health agencies and the NIH to conduct more medical research into the causes of and treatments for ME/CFS.

"Remarkably little research funding has been made available to study the cause of ME/CFS, mechanisms associated with the development and progression of the disease, or effective treatment, especially given the number of people affected." Institute of Medicine

"Unfortunately, ME/CFS is an area where the research and medical community has frustrated its constituents, by failing to assess and treat the disease and by allowing patients to be stigmatized....Over the last 20 years, minimal progress has been made to improve the state of the science for patients with ME/CFS.... Innovative biomedical research is urgently needed to identify risk and therapeutic targets, and for translation efforts." NIH Pathways to Prevention Report

NIH currently funds only $5 million annually for CFS research, despite the fact that 1-2.5 million Americans suffer with the disease. That is not enough funding to spur breakthrough science, much less FDA-approved treatments. By contrast, illnesses such as Multiple Sclerosis and Systemic Lupus receive more than $100 million annually in NIH research funding, although fewer patients are ill. Those diseases now boast diagnostic tests and many FDA-approved treatments because of the high quality research NIH has funded in those fields. That is what patients like me so desperately need, and I believe that is what it takes to fulfill President Obama’s 2012 commitment to elevate CFS at the NIH.

I have no treatments and I am very ill. The FDA has rejected the only medication that has undergone clinical trials. Please help me by funding medical research into ME/CFS equally and urgently, so I can get well and return to work and live my life.

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