Ignore my recent post - my leaky brain didn't realize the sound was being made by another window I had open. DERP.
DERP here also. Didn't read this thread til later. Argh.
Ignore my recent post - my leaky brain didn't realize the sound was being made by another window I had open. DERP.
[/quote][/quote]No, it is not. Directive is to provide advice to Secretary of Health.
(this could be a fundamental failing in the charter, design, etc. Do other advisory committees have power? um, the name implies not. why not? who regulates the agencies? nominally, Congress and the White House, but in reality, Congress and WH defer to the agencies - all of them, not just health; this is a systemic failure in our entire government structure: there is virtually NO accountability for agencies, they do whatever they like, they run by a GOBSART model, they are self-contained)
Yes. New info to new members, who cycle through regularly (good feature for informing more ppl? but makes the panel dysfunctional, as must continually start from scratch to inform new people of severity, nature, etc.)
Supposedly info passed to Koh, Sebelius. What they do with info is beyond me. Write a letter in reply and then put recommendations in the round file?
Thanks for that. I didn't find the mute button on CoveritLive, so I was stuck alternating between listening to the irritating click and muting everything and getting by with the CoveritLive report. Now that I know there is a button somewhere I'll look for it more thoroughly next time.
The public testimony is heart-wrenching, but who really sees it? And does it really differ from year to year? It seems like the wrong place for an appeal to the emotions, since the people on the committee actually *can't* do anything different whether they are emotionally moved or not. And you can't "pass along" an emotional response to your higher-ups, much less have it influence their actions.
So, are the new members of the committee not briefed in some separate venue beforehand, rather than playing catch-up during the public meeting itself? Or perhaps they are provided briefing materials beforehand which they don't read? (which would not be the first time that has happened in the history of meetings).
The public testimony is heart-wrenching, but who really sees it? And does it really differ from year to year? It seems like the wrong place for an appeal to the emotions, since the people on the committee actually *can't* do anything different whether they are emotionally moved or not. And you can't "pass along" an emotional response to your higher-ups, much less have it influence their actions.
regarding not getting message from "don't call it ME" emails, judging by the ones I have seen, it's possible the message could need to be articulated more clearly if Nancy Lee was mistaken in how she interpreted them.
I would recommend focusing on the definition as key, and mentioning the name as related to that and as an "also vital".
It's not helpful to me to focus on ME versus CFS, because there is no real entity that is CFS. Oxford-CFS is a catch-all for patients no one wants to bother with, including ME and a whole lot of others (missed cases of Lupus, MS, MDD, rare diseases, etc.). Reeves Disease was specifically designed to catch a lot of primary depression (without necessarily having any fatigue, weakness, physical debility, etc. - indeed they don't even have to have a disease of depression, some transient emotional troubles will do). And Fukuda-CFS is a really bad attempt, conflating Mono with their population of ME, and being too vague, and still catches a lot of misdiagnosed other diseases.