I think we can explain the need and urgency once only, then leave it out of the other parts.
I agree - that needs to be in the intro and not repeated in the goals.
I think we can explain the need and urgency once only, then leave it out of the other parts.
When we get a few more goals written, this could be a good way to automate our letters to congress. If we have a more emergent action, someone could then contact @JenB .
- One Click Politics (for contacting members of congress – US, Canada and Australia with UK + New Zealand coming soon) – this is something that is pricey but we can add it immediately if there is an emerging action that could use this tool.
extra, extra works.I've been also needing extra rest (or should I say extra, extra rest?).
I'm going to start on @WillowJ 's research goal (might take a while).
I'm confused by this reply @Sasha I'm talking about the editing process. I'd like to see the two research versions "side-by-side" or in our case, in one post. How I envisioned the process was that I'd have an edit pass at both research versions and then post them here for discussion. Also, as for me combining the research goals, the point of splitting up goals was to spread out the effort by any one person. But in any case, written goals would get discussion here before approving final wording in the letter.
oceiv said:Given that confusion, I'm working on the patient access goal, in the meantime. I still need studies, articles, blogs or quotes on patient access or care, if someone could point to any or to someone whom I might ask.
Good point. My error, sorry.Her version contains some of the same info and arguments as my piece but also some new stuff and recommendations that we haven't discussed on the thread (appointing someone from one of the NIH institutes to formulate a funding plan). That's fair enough but indicates that we haven't necessarily got to the point of agreeing what the ask is.
For quotes, it's probably possible to email any of the clinical and/or research docs, like Jose Montoya, Nancy Klimas, Mary Ann Fletcher, Leonard Jason, John Chia, Andy Kogelnik, etc.I'm working on the patient access goal, in the meantime. I still need studies, articles, blogs or quotes on patient access or care, if someone could point to any or to someone whom I might ask.
Sustained biomedical research funding of $250 million per year
As the IOM report stated, although ME/CFS affects over one million U.S. patients and has annual economic costs of $17 to $24 billion, there has been “remarkably little research funding.”
For years, ME/CFS has gotten a meager $5 million average in annual funding. In 2014, ME/CFS was near the bottom of the NIH funding list, 231st out of 244 diseases. Similarly-disabling diseases, Lupus and M.S. receive 50 times more research funding per patient per year, despite fewer patients combined. ME/CFS patients are asking for a fair share of the budget pie, regardless of the size of the pie
This long history of catastrophically-low funding has resulted in scant ME/CFS research and clinical trials, the cause of ME/CFS remaining unknown, no biological diagnosis tests, no progress markers for clinical trials, no FDA-approved treatments and top scientists with crucial research programs remaining unfunded. Funding inequality means that home-bound/bed-bound (severe) patients rarely get studied.
Funding parity would finally allow an aggressive, biomedical research program into all of the above and into drug and medical treatments, biobanks, studies of severity, incidence, prevalence, progression and mortality, biopathology and sub-types. But none will happen without your insistence and action.
Similar diseases already get such research. ME/CFS patients have waited for decades. Without this research, ME/CFS patients will remain unequal for decades more. Please demand that ME/CFS gets biomedical research funding parity: $250 million/year.
Sustained biomedical research funding of $250 million per year
As the IOM report stated, although ME/CFS affects over 1 million patients in the US, with annual economic costs of $17 to $24 billion, there has been “remarkably little research funding”.
ME/CFS has been historically underfunded, with an NIH budget of $5 million per year. Multiple Sclerosis and Lupus receive about $100 million each. In 2014, ME/CFS was near the bottom of the NIH funding list, at 231st out of 244 disease categories. Yet FDA calls the condition "a serious disease" which "severely affects day-to-day functioning, and some patients struggle with the simplest tasks of daily life." Furthermore, FDA finds: "A significant unmet medical need exists for patients with CFS and ME."
Parity with similarly-disabling diseases would be $250 million a year and would allow an aggressive program to understand all aspects of the disease. We are asking for a fair share of the budget pie, regardless of the size of the pie. People don't have different worth depending on how well-researched their disease is. Unequal research funding influences unequal patient care. ME/CFS researchers cannot access funding even when they have ready, promising plans. Renowned virus-hunter, Ian Lipkin, who has worked on AIDS and SARS, recently couldn’t get funding for his ME/CFS research. NIH tells the patient community and researchers that they cannot fix this problem on their own. A fix for desperate patients is up to congress.
With a push from congress, NIH could write and implement a plan for how to increase ME/CFS research. This plan would include Requests for Applications (RFAs) in all areas of ME/CFS biomedical research, including for Centers of Excellence for treatment and research; biobanks; studies of incidence, prevalence and mortality; the disease’s natural course; biomarkers; biopathology; studies for potential drug treatments; and indeed all the basic research that should have been done decades ago.
Therefore we must insist that you act to correct this situation and consider time to be of the essence. Please demand that ME/CFS gets biomedical research funding parity: $250 million/year.
For quotes, it's probably possible to email any of the clinical and/or research docs, like Jose Montoya, Nancy Klimas, Mary Ann Fletcher, Leonard Jason, John Chia, Andy Kogelnik, etc.
Many are on video here:
https://www.youtube.com/user/MECFSAlert
Probably the FDA report and the IOM report would be the richest US studies I can think of on patient access (or lack thereof) and the IOM report may have references; Lenny Jason has published some stuff on lack of medical training, and there are some UK studies on unmet needs (CDC has been more interested in publishing how "well" its outreach programs are working, than in checking in with patients about what the unmet needs actually are). I might be able to post some UK studies here later.
ProHealth said:3. How long did it take you to be diagnosed with ME/CFS by a healthcare provider?
29% had been ill from 6 to 20-plus years before being diagnosed.
Under 1 year....275....23%
1-5 years.........579....78%
6-10 years.......171....14%
11-15 years.......80......7%
16-20 years.......53......4%
20+ years..........52......4%
________________________
Total..............1210....100%
ProHealth said:4. How many healthcare providers did you see before you were diagnosed?
44% saw from 5 to more than 20 doctors before being diagnosed
1-4 doctors........679....58%
5-9 doctors........336....28%
10-15 doctors.....110.....9%
16-20 doctors.......34.....3%
More than 20........53.....4%
_________________________
Total.................1212....100%
Although medical research used to be a bipartisan goal, I would strike, these days American congress members always like to appear budget conscious. I would strike "NIH budget cuts are irrelevant."
NIH budget cuts have been a frequent counter-argument to our asking for a funding increase, even among patients. People don't get that you can halve the total funding pie but if we got our fair share of a reduced pie, it would be an astronomical increase for us. I really do think that point needs making but individuals can always edit it out if they want.
The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Advisory Committee (CFSAC) unanimously stipulated that all references to myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) in these recommendations are defined by the 2003 Canadian Consensus Criteria (CCC)1.
1. CFSAC recommends that the Secretary fund ME/CFS commensurate with the epidemiologic prevalence and economic burden that this disease imposes on American society. 2,3
2. CFSAC recommends that HHS provide opportunities for dissemination of information through the development of a curriculum at all U.S.-based medical schools providing the tools needed for physicians and other medical professionals to recognize ME/CFS as defined solely by the 2003 CCC and to make appropriate referrals.
3. CFSAC recommends that funding be allotted to the appropriate agencies that can best develop teaching modules featuring ME/CFS patients with complex presentations as defined by the 2003 CCC.
4. CFSAC recommends that HHS provide funding through Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and other agencies to support integrative medicine programs featuring learning about ME/CFS patients as defined by the 2003 CCC.
5. CFSAC recommends that HHS fund through appropriate agencies novel programs such as “Project Echo”4 comprised of experts and/or multidisciplinary teams with expertise in ME/CFS that reach areas where patients do not have access to adequate clinical care for ME/CFS as defined by the 2003 CCC.
4. Khatrik K, Haddad M, et al. Project Echo: replicating a novel model to enhance access to hepatitis C care in a community health center. J HealthCare Poor Underserved. 2013 May; 24(2):850-8.
@taniaaust1 To make clear the quoted part,. it wasn't the point itself, but rather the "irrelevant" phrasing that was the objection.
For years, ME/CFS has gotten a meager $5 million average in annual funding. In 2014, ME/CFS was near the bottom of the NIH funding list, 231st out of 244 diseases. Similarly-disabling diseases, Lupus and M.S. receive 50 times more research funding per patient per year, despite fewer patients combined. Although NIH may well have varying future budget cuts, ME/CFS patients are asking for a fair share of the budget pie, regardless of the size of the pie.
We don't have such government home care benefits here in the U.S.. Medicare doesn't pay for unskilled care. Only skilled care and only those with limitations. Long-term care is not covered. Medicaid has some nursing home benefits. Good luck on the legal outcome.