Go ahead and give the testimony in limerick form! It might actually make people notice your testimony more.
Reasons to testify:
1. Add your name (or not, if you want to stay anonymous) and be counted among the people affected. I have a friend who works in government in a non-CFS field but in a public relations area. They do count and pay attention to what people testify or contact them about. They also read blogs, forums, etc.
2. We shouldn't assume that members, especially ex-officio members, know everything about the illness. Ex-officio members rotate in and out so some might not have heard directly about an issue. For example, Dr. Nancy Lee, the person in charge of this meeting, just started in May; the AHRQ, Social Security, and FDA rep are new, just starting in May. Remember these folks are physicians and researchers and non-health officials, who likely have not gotten educated about CFS during their training and work experiences. Furthermore, it takes repetition sometime for an idea to take hold and people learn in different ways -- sometimes, the way one patient presents something might be easier for one official to understand than another patient.
3. Hold government accountable and make them aware we know what is going on. If the government or any entity for that matter feels no one is watching them, they might pay even less attention. But if you mention in your testimony that you know only $6 million is given in a "good year" to CFS research (not to pick on a specific area but infertility research gets $40 million a year) and that only $3.64 per affected person per year is spent on CFS research, that might make them think twice.
4. Some things you can ask for:
- Renew CFS "Request for Application" (RFA) within NIH. This expires next January. Without an RFA, no money will
be set aside for new CFS research starting in January.
- Ask that Centers of Excellence be built and/ or funded for CFS. Centers educate people, take care of patients, an
d do research for a specific illness. There are centers for all types of illness that are better understood, have
treatments available but none for CFS. There were 3 in the US in the early 2000s generating a fair amount of rese
arch (Klimas, Buchwald, Natelson) but they were cut for no clear reason.
Bottom line for me: It's easy to be cynical/ bogged down/ hopeless, etc. and decide nothing I do will make a difference but I would rather die fighting than look back in hindsight 20 years from now, when I could still be sick, and wonder What if I had done more? try harder? Would things have been different? If we look at history and any movement (civil rights, womens rights, labor unions, environmental movement, etc.), it's only in hindsight that we know which were the pivotal moments that made a difference.
If I do go and give testimony, I was thinking of doing it in Limerick form, (just kidding) What can I say that they don't already know or have heard. The only thing I think I can do is put a face to the illness and personal story. They know that we need funding. They know we need more studies to find bio-markers. They know the name is a joke. I'm sure they all know about the new ICC. They know that doctors need more education about the illness. What can I tell them that they don't already know?
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