One thing that's been on my mind for a long time is the idea of taking legal action. Writing letters to MP and whatnot is great, and I am all for it, but ultimately, you have to convince someone who probably doesn't want to be convinced. Especially when there are powerful lobby groups involved. One kickback is louder than a thousand signatures...if you know what I mean.
If you can find a legal angle, then you force the concerned parties to pay attention. I don't know much at all about the law and exactly what angle could be taken. Are there any Canadian lawyers on this site?
Primarily I'm thinking of some sort of class action?? Anyone??
This is totally just throwing ideas around. So shut me up if I'm talking nonsense.
Julius, I totally agree that approaching our MP may not be helpful unless the said MP is personally touched by CFS in his/her close family. Petitions would not be my cup of tea either- A class action would make decision makers listen carefully. I am not totally sure how one initiates class action. One good way to get started would be to approach one of the disability lawyers that are sympathetic to our cause.
The other angle we can approach our cause is from the charter of rights. We pay our fees for health care. Why on earth can't we get access to it and why can't we be taken seriously- for a lot of us anyways. Why is is that HIV get all this funding but CFS got 800 thousands since 2000 despite having a bigger population of sick and disabled people some of them sick since the early 1980's?
Maybe both ideas join together and a lawyer could start working with a group of us, with perhaps some of the goals could be:
1- Funding for SERIOUS research for CFS.
2- Funding for out of town recognized treatments from recognized specialists until they become available in town
3- Compensation for those that have been sick all these years and been told there was nothing to do
4- Mandatory education for ALL medical staff about CFS from a reliable source (not the CDC, not from England, not from a psychiatrist other than Ellie Stein) with details on what they are learning (!)
5- Clear directives for patients to complain about the health care they recieve should it lack professionalism, with punitive actions towards the offenders- it seems to be absent here, and in general unless it's a sexual offense, all the doctors get is a slap in the wrist or nothing at all.
Just my 2 cents. I am certainly willing to take it to the next level, on the provincial and federal level.