To Alex3619's question…
I've only been involved with ME for a little over three years so please let me know where this is repeating historical ground…
I apologize up-front for the length of the post.
FIrst, I deeply appreciate the health limits of this community. I am healthy but my son is sick and I also work with a lot of patient advocates whose ability to advocate on their own behalf is bound by the limits of their disease. Getting healthy people involved - and more financial support - is critical and remains one of the biggest challenges.
But leaving that critical issue aside for the moment, It seems to me that we have a range of activities happening over the next few months that will reach the ears of the media and the legislative leaders that we can leverage to gain the attention that we want to see. For instance:
1. P2P, AHRQ Evidence Review and IOM will all be published in the next few months and we know they will be broadly publicized through the media. Even if they were perfect (which I don't expect), there would still be gaping holes around funding, pediatrics, research case definition, ICD categorization, etc that we would probably want to push . But from what we have seen with at least AHRQ and P2P so far, we can anticipate deep flaws that can be leveraged just because they are so bad.
2. We have two films coming out - Unbroken and the Forgotten Plague. Both are useful in different ways. I can't help but think of the parallels between Unbroken and the unimaginable adversity that this community has faced. I believe that Laura is being interviewed by I think Tom Brokaw sometime this month.
3. We have gotten some good press coverage on recent studies, particularly Stanford, which feels different than coverage a few years ago. And we've also seen some recent articles in mainstream press that have talked about the political issues.
4. We have outright violations of FACA and FOIA, allegations of intimidation and a documented history of HHS ignoring both CFSAC recommendations and legislative appropriations language for investment in this disease. Perhaps even more damning is the fact that HHS has not achieved a single tangible outcome for patients in thirty years.
5. And finally, while I recognize and value that we have differences on tactics, we also have a shared outrage at what is happening and more importantly, an increasingly common language on how we talk about the disease and the political issues. For instance, at the IOM public hearing last January, it was striking that the advocates all called the disease ME and called for the CCC and/or PEM as a hallmark, mandatory symptom. At this week's CFSAC, all 15 public commenters shared an outrage over what was happening - with everything - a fact noted by one of the CFSAC members.
I'm sure there is more - 3 scientific conferences this year, crowd sourcing and private funding, UK and Norwegian trials on Rituxan, Lipkin's pointed comments about the review process for this disease but you get the idea.
So maybe the question is how to best leverage the opportunity that this collection of events creates in a strategic way? Do we have a tipping point in all of this that if we push in the right areas, will finally tip the whole paradigm? We know that playing Whac-a-mole with the latest HHS effort isn't working.
Here's a few ideas but I really want to through them out as food for thought and a question to everyone...
- letters to media, even local papers that highlight the story behind Unbroken - the disease, the personal and community impact, what science is telling us
- see how to get Forgotten Plague out there when it comes out. Not sure what Ryan has planned or the exact timing so that would need to be looked at
- letters, twitter, etc to legislative leaders that highlight the lack of progress, the waste, the bad science and how disabled people are being treated. HHS spends just 0.03% of the yearly economic impact. As a recent Forbes article said, that is incredibly short-sighted. Lay out the big picture problem, the cost to society and what needs to be done. MEAdvocacy has a mechanism to send targeted letters and I think the basic story can be laid out fairly easily at this level.
- contact investigative journalists to get them to look at this story. I think this requires some level of documentation of the story because otherwise its too hard to pick the story up and write about it. Jennie SPotila's and Jeannette Burmeister's efforts are really helpful here. This is also where I've spent most of my efforts.
- As Llewellyn King suggested, organize a march on D.C. in the spring. Others have suggested a demo. But it needs to be large - twenty or fifty people isn't enough - so will require a lot of pre-planning
I'm sure there are others - ACLU on the treatment of disabled people? etc. MEAdvocacy is raising funds to hire a PR firm.
The point being, if we look at where we are today and what's coming, where and how can we best use our limited community energies in a way that tips the situation - and ideally gets healthy people involved for future capacity?
RIght now, we have limited capacity that is an inescapable reality. If we can only do two or three things, what is the most important place to focus our limited energies?