. . . Dr. has a patient he doesn't know what to do with . . .
. . . motivated to change . . . if there is a negative consequence to them if the status quo continues. We need to get people to say "no" to being pushed off on the psychs for no good reason . . .
In countries with taxpayer-funded health care, people need to start complaining to their members of parliament . . .
This (per modified quote).
How did diseases move from being misunderstood/invisible to "very real and worth fighting"?
I've heard that change in society occurs not just when some people adopt the change, but when key people do. This will likely be politicians/major lobbyists, major league sports players and musicians, other celebrities. Another H. pylori-type finding, another Nobel Prize winner.
Promotion via fundraisers is usually a good thing. Cancer has survivor walks and all-night vigils on university campuses. ALS has the Ice Bucket Challenge.
I think having a "photogenic" effect/test is key. In MS we have brain lesions, ALS has paralysis.
What does the general public really know about ME/CFS except "fatigue"? Why advocate/donate to ME/CFS vs. another condition?
I think ME/CFS needs to be attacked on multiple levels. While scientists are researching, we attempt fundraising, take part in drug trials, explain the disease to family and friends, write articles and books, educate our doctors.
(Inester7 actually walked into their GP with a heart monitor that went off. GP changed attitude after that.
)
Could we send the
ICP Primer or the
IACFS/ME Primer to psychiatrists, universities, bloggers, known Youtubers, PBS, radio, or the History channel?
(Dr. Klimas, De Meirleir, and Bell were on the ICP. The IACFS/ME primer has a foreword by a Harvard M.D.)
Does a new Primer need to be developed, the groups contacted and updated on new information? For example, I notice there is a suggestion in one primer that a Lyme diagnosis rules out ME/CFS, but a protein study may go against that.
It would also help to attack the fallacies. We could write counters to the misinformation in magazines and other news sources. We could explain bad psychiatry, good psychiatry, and the innovative practitioners who are promoting physiological evidence on ME/CFS. And link to similar tales. I remember a presentation on ME/CFS that cited Elizabeth Forsythe who was pooh-poohed for her illness, and how she eventually went on to write the book "Living with Multiple Sclerosis."
I must admit, it takes great courage to go against the grain, and I admire those who have the heart and drive to do so.
Influencing just one life can bring change, even for the next generation.