I don't know. I think the people that make up the CAA at this point in time are playing to their strengths. Kim is good with working with Washington and getting the issues in front of politicians. Susan is good at organizing research although I think she may be a little wobbly on the correct definitions! So they are doing and going in the direction of the people who are in charge. No problem.
The problem is that the patient population want's an advocacy group that can
1- define the illness for researchers, doctors and patients.
2- educate the public, medical and politicians in an aggressive manor.
3- create and release strong press releases that counter mis-information quickly and with the same amount of coverage as the opposition.
4- lobby for changes in public and government recognition of the illness.
5- speak out loudly against patient abuses by medical personnel, government policies and public perceptions.
So if we accept that the CAA does not do any of these things, is not going to do any of these things and that these thing need to be done then the only logical solution is to build an organization dedicated to doing those things for us. Fund this organization and it's very specific mandate to do these things. Cause it don't work without money. (sad dog sighs)
P.s. sorry leaves I didn't vote cause you didn't have a category for ;
'The CAA is not doing what we need so we just leave them to do what they are going to do and go somewhere else for what we need.' (big grins)
The problem with this is that CAA talks to reporters. They do not stick to what they are good at, such as funding the Lights (which is great).
Instead they go out there and say crazy things like defending the use of Oxford [what, they'd never heard of Holmes or Ramsay?], spinal tap is not a nice thing so imply it may not be useful in ME/CFS, saying the problem with the CBT/GET study is that this type of therapy is not available in America (not that that there was a high incidence of refusal and dropouts, that the inclusion criteria was invalid for CFS [actually what we call CF in America], that the effect was insignificant and given who the authors were that this was likely to be due to brainwashing rather than actual improvement, and most importantly that this is not an appropriate use of funds because all diseases show similar response to CBT in studies but what's really needed is to better understand the biomedical causes and this needs serious research and funding). And get Reeves whistleblower protection, etc.