You can view the page at http://forums.phoenixrising.me/content.php?532-The-Blame-Game-A-Way-Forward
In reply to Christopher, post 14:
Hi Christopher, I think you are right in that we cannot blame patients. Our limitations are what they are. This does not mean we cannot explore ways to improve the situation, but the real test is whether or not they work - can they be used by our community effectively?
You missed a website. The first place most people look. The Wikipedia. What does that fount of wisdom tell us - essentially that we are all crazy, though they dress it up in fancy words. The vast majority of research, and in particularly biomedical research on ME and CFS, are simply ignored or dismissed in the Wikipedia. When the Wikipedia entry finally represents the current state of research and opinion on ME and CFS rather than being dominated by one limited school of thought, then the internet will be more ME friendly.
There is also this: there are upwards of 4000 members on PR I think, and maybe 2000 active advocates world-wide ... out of 17 million (the oft quoted figure) to 28 million patients (my estimate). These figures do not take into account the numbers (perhaps ten times as many) who simply use the net for investigation but do not register. So maybe there are 60,000 people using the net in this way. So this is 0.21% to 0.35% of the global community in advocacy and PR. I have no way of estimating how many are using other resources, but it probably isnt a whole lot more. So maybe 1-2% of us are on the net, are using net-based resources. Now this is distorted by the fact that most will be in third world countries. It is further distorted because many of us cannot use a computer due to neurological issues. Finally we have the problem that many of us are dirt poor - those who can even own a computer and internet connection are not the poorest members of our community.
If you use a figure of 2,000,000 patients, representing the USA and Europe primarily, the percentage rises to 3%. This is better but not much better. My fudge factor for guestimating how many are using the net is maybe 10%. Does anyone have data on search engine queries or whatever to give us a better figure?
So the question that comes up from time to time: how do we reach out to the rest? The second question is: how do we motivate some of them to do more to improve our situation globally?
I agree that if the phase 3 clinical trials of Rituximab for CCC ME/CFS work out as expected then a major focus of advocacy, if not the main focus of advocacy, should be to promote these results, and action based on these results. In the meantime I think we can do more to advocate for Rituximab trials where and when we think they can be made to happen. One of the things I like about the Rituximab research is it has the potential to fulfil both of my primary agendas at the same time: give us good ME research, and debunk bad ME research.
Bye, Alex
(I've never been able to figure out where those $1,000,000 people with CFS are ))
But you make a good point, maybe we need a very basic 'stand up and get counted' type campaign?
A small team could focus on research paper accuracy. It does take quite a bit of work, however, to understand the literature. Ultimately we should have a team that provides interpretations of new studies to media figures to try and get them into the press.
The video has already been created (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vIWGFFkp_lw).Cort said:Our biggest need is to get more research funding but that will take more work. I can see creating a video that makes the patient community aware of the problem.
This scourge, this foul and stealthy confiscation of life, is so little understood that there's even confusion about its name.
In the United States, the disease is known as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS): a bland and trivializing nom de plume bestowed on the disease by the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. Elsewhere in the world, it's known as myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME). American patients tend to use both names and the acronym ME/CFS....
There is no known route to infection, no diagnoses and no cure. Research has been scattered and funded grudgingly at such low levels that Dr. Fred Volinsky of Boston has calculated annual federal funding for ME/CFS at only $1.25 per patient compared to $400 for multiple sclerosis....
There are parallels as well as dissimilarities to the early days of the AIDS. For AIDS, the stigma was sexual; for ME/CFS, the stigma is sloth....
A cure this year is unlikely, but better understanding can start today. Now.
Wanted: A high-energy, high-profile celebrity to do for ME/CFS what Elizabeth Taylor did for AIDS, what Jerry Lewis did for muscular dystrophy, and what Michael J. Fox is doing for Parkinsons: raising concern, raising money and banishing stigma. Fox has raised $264 million for Parkinsons. By contrast, the Chronic Fatigue Immune Deficiency Syndrome Association targeted raising just $2 million for research last year (http://open.salon.com/blog/llewellyn_king/2012/01/02/mecfs_into_2012_without_cure_or_care).
When it emerged in the late 1990s that the agency had been diverting funds designated for CFS to other programs and then lying to Congress about it, Dr. Reeveswho was in charge of the program while the financial irregularities were taking placesought and received whistle-blower protection.
Dr. Reeves also enraged the patient community by his refusal to consider changing the much-hated name of the diseasea name endorsed by the CDC in its 1988 paper and aggressively promoted in a public awareness campaign the agency launched in the mid-2000s. Patients say the name, like the term yuppie flu, reinforces stereotypes that they are a bunch of self-entitled whiners and malingerers....
It is not possible to exaggerate how much patients despise the name and believe it has hindered public understandingand how much they fault the CDC and Dr. Reeves for championing it....
Now, almost two years after Dr. Reeves departure, advocates and researchers say they have seen a shift in tonesome believe it is genuine, others notbut so far little change in substance....
Dr. Reeves departure...was a watershed event for patients and advocates, many of whom blame the agency for the prolonged lack of significant progress in CFS research. (They also blame years of inadequate funding from the National Institutes of Health, but thats another long story; it is worth noting, however, that the NIH online database of spending by disease category indicates only $4 to $6 million allocated annually for CFS in recent years, a small amount compared to other illnesses associated with similar levels of morbidity....)
In any event, the most promising research into the disease has been taking place not at the CDC or NIH but at academic medical centers; much of the new work is being funded by private donors who have family members with CFS....
With regards to the name of the illness, [Dr. Unger] wrote: Opinions of advocates, clinicians and researchers remain divided about whether CFS and ME are the same or different entities. However, we are following the discussions with interest and would consider any consensus that is reached by patient groups and the scientific community going forward....
Reaction to Dr. Ungers efforts appears decidedly mixed so far. Yet some members of the research community express optimism about being able to develop, with Dr. Unger, the kind of cooperative framework that many felt was absent when Dr. Reeves ran the program (http://www.virology.ws/2011/11/23/chronic-fatigue-syndrome-and-the-cdc-a-long-tangled-tale/).
Patients have long accused the mainstream medical and scientific community of neglect and abandonment. Many say that the C.D.C. has largely treated their disease as a psychological or stress-related condition....
The events of the past couple of years, though disheartening to chronic fatigue syndrome patients, may have a silver lining: Research into the disease, much of it privately financed, is ratcheting up.
A new research and treatment center has been created at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. The Hutchins Family Foundation is investing $10 million in the Chronic Fatigue Initiative, an effort to find causes and treatments that has recruited top researchers from Columbia, Harvard, Duke and other institutions.
The disease had languished in the background at N.I.H. and C.D.C., and other scientists had not been paying much attention to it, said John Coffin, a professor of molecular biology at Tufts University. This has brought it back into attention (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/07/h...traction-is-far-and-wide.html?_r=1&ref=health).
Brutus said:There is a tide in the affairs of men.
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
On such a full sea are we now afloat,
And we must take the current when it serves,
Or lose our ventures.
(Julius Caesar Act 4, scene 3)
How would we make such a campaign broadly appealing? What media would be used? How could we fund it? This is not meant to be difficult, I am asking if we can solve these questions, because I agree we need this.
My first thought is to run it initially as an online survey, but run small ads allover - definitely not just the internet. The survey would have links to information sources, plus a linking page to major and reliable websites ... obviously not wikipedia.