You can view the page at http://www.forums.aboutmecfs.org/content.php?247-The-Time-For-Action-Campaign-Update
I had the pleasure of meeting Dr. Mangan at the ME/CFSAC. I sent a thank you note per the request of The Time for Action Campaign. There is an important message in his reply. Would someone in the know please comment about his reply? What can patients do?
"Thank you for your note…we’ll do our best to support the biomedical research that will lead to a proper diagnosis and cure for this terrible disease! However, we need more strong applications from universities, hospitals and research institutions! Please help us help you. Thank you for your support…"
Dennis F. Mangan, Ph.D.
Co-Chair, Trans-NIH ME/CFS Research Working Group
I had the pleasure of meeting Dr. Mangan at the ME/CFSAC. I sent a thank you note per the request of The Time for Action Campaign. There is an important message in his reply. Would someone in the know please comment about his reply? What can patients do?
"Thank you for your notewell do our best to support the biomedical research that will lead to a proper diagnosis and cure for this terrible disease! However, we need more strong applications from universities, hospitals and research institutions! Please help us help you. Thank you for your support"
Dennis F. Mangan, Ph.D.
Co-Chair, Trans-NIH ME/CFS Research Working Group
Many of us are aging, emboldening us to a level of passionate activism never seen before in the community. My particular sun is quite high. I'm 57, sick for more than 2 decades: m.e. has devoured my most productive years. I appreciate your attention, but I am not a sentimentalist.
Brown Eyed Girl, this is the standard reply his office is sending out to those who have "thanked" him.
There has been a great deal of debate about whether to pursue this campaign further. I have come down on the side that until we see what would amount to a sea change in NIH policy, I will continue to demand action. This is the post I sent Dennis Mangan this morning:
Dennis,
The word is that you are a kind, compassionate man, who genuinely wants to help. And I believe that. But you are employed by an institution that has marginalized, denigrated, but mostly ignored this population, depriving it of both credibility and research funds. As you know, we get $5 million dollars a year, which amounts to very little in real terms.
. As far as I am concerned the NIH, while not as horrendously destructive as the CDC towards us, colluded in one of the major coverrups of the 20th century, so good words, warm smiles really don't cut it.
This leaves me dumbfounded - stop a campaign that got meetings with several NIH officials and which engaged the patient community? What in the world? Who would want to stop something like that? (I can tell you the NIH doesn't like it). I must be missing something. My take was that this is something that we only want to build on.There has been a great deal of debate about whether to pursue this campaign further.
I agree. He is a nice guy - he does appear to be concerned and he does appear to be trying but we're way past warm, fuzzy statements - we need actual commitments and I'm sure Bob, Charlotte and Rivka won't be satisfied with anything less. I certainly won't. What we should be asking is "where's the money"? - show us the money.
As to this, though
This leaves me dumbfounded - stop a campaign that got meetings with several NIH officials and which engaged the patient community? What in the world? Who would want to stop something like that? (I can tell you the NIH doesn't like it). I must be missing something. My take was that this is something that we only want to build on.
OK, if lack of quality applications for extramural biomedical research is REALLY the issue, tell me more.
- How much money is earmarked for extramural CFS research and isn't being granted owing to lack of applications?
- Have there been no applications, or applications that were deemed lacking? If they were thought to be lacking, in what way were they lacking?
- How about NIH funding some more intramural research on their own premises?
- How exactly ARE patients supposed to get universities, hospitals, and research instiutions more interested in CFS biomedical research? Apparently being horrendously sick and debilitated isn't enough to do it. Have we been unwilling to get our blood drawn and participate in studies? We're DYING to do it. We'd crawl to the labs on hands and knees to do it.
OK, if lack of quality applications for extramural biomedical research is REALLY the issue, tell me more.
- How much money is earmarked for extramural CFS research and isn't being granted owing to lack of applications?
- Have there been no applications, or applications that were deemed lacking? If they were thought to be lacking, in what way were they lacking?
- How about NIH funding some more intramural research on their own premises?
- How exactly ARE patients supposed to get universities, hospitals, and research instiutions more interested in CFS biomedical research? Apparently being horrendously sick and debilitated isn't enough to do it. Have we been unwilling to get our blood drawn and participate in studies? We're DYING to do it. We'd crawl to the labs on hands and knees to do it.
According to XMRV Global Action "WPI has been denied grants from the NIH 6 times since the publishing of the Science paper in 2009". The institute behind a study in Science? Now they're slipshod?
OK, if lack of quality applications for extramural biomedical research is REALLY the issue, tell me more.