Australia: Write to the Health Minister

Need a kick-start to writing a letter? This is a letter template to help you write to politicians and bring attention to the issue. Use it as a guide to create your own letter, remove or add parts as you wish.
Now is the time to write, before this year’s federal election!
Before you start, consider asking for what you need, tell your story and tailor it to the minister/shadow minister you are writing to. This will help you determine who to send it to; either via your local member or to the minister/s responsible for the area. Address each letter to only one person at a time (but send as many as you like!), otherwise the recipients may assume others are responding and the impact will be lessened.
Personalise: Talk about your life before your illness: What was your career? Could disability services enable you to do some work?
Are you most concerned about funding for medical research? Education for doctors?
Did you have/are you having education difficulties that the minister could help with?
Are you a veteran? Do you need help with housing? Have you had trouble accessing suitable health services (ie GP home visits). Do you need care? This will help you determine who to send it to; either via your local member or to the minister/s responsible for the area.
You might consider writing to federal election candidates in your area and ask them what they would do to help people with ME or CFS if they were elected. 
You may ask them to take the Chilli ME Challenge or to visit you at home to see the extent of your illness. Mine did it for me!
Personalising the letter will make it more likely to be read and have an impact, so if there are any other issues or questions you have, include them in the letter.

Here’s who to write to & how to contact them:
Federal senators and members
Victorian Parliament
Tasmanian Parliament
Northern Territory Parliament
ACT Parliament
NSW Parliament
South Australian Parliament
Western Australian Parliament
Queensland Parliament


 
Dear (local federal/state/territory member)

(federal MP or senator)
(federal health minister or shadow health minister)

(federal disability/housing/social services/ageing/medical research/veterans’ affairs/education)

(state or territory MP)
(state or territory health minister or shadow health minister)

(state disability/housing/social services/ageing/medical research/veterans’ affairs/education)

(candidate)

I am one of the 96,000 Australians living with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis or ME (or I am one of the 242,000 Australians with chronic fatigue syndrome or your diagnosis. Australian doctors, medical services and researchers use overwhelming use CFS. Please don’t use MECFS unless you’ve been diagnosed using the Canadian Consensus Criteria as this confuses people who are unaware of the International Consensus Criteria).
(Here you may wish to write about your circumstances for example, I’ve been unwell for xx years, this is the impact on my life, financial loss, lost educational opportunities, lost opportunity to have a family, lack of support, gradual or I was xx years old when I fell sick after contracting glandular fever/Coxsackie virus/Q fever/Ross River fever etc)
Our illness is an issue of national significance.
According to the National Health and Medical Research Council, the federal government has not funded a study into chronic fatigue syndrome for more than a decade, since 2005. Only two studies have been funded since 2000, a total of only $558,000 in 17 years (and one of these studies was only relevant to Gulf War veterans). The Department of Health just admitted it overstated the funding and submitted new figures, revealing an even worse situation.
Compare this to another immune illness, HIV, which has received more than $100 million despite having a much smaller prevalence in the population. (There are around 26,000 people living with HIV in Australia, much smaller than the number with ME and chronic fatigue syndrome.)
ME costs the Australian economy $4 billion in lost earnings every year. We have had very little help, not enough biomedical research and don’t even have a national body to represent us like the Cancer Council, MS Society or the Heart Foundation. I ask for your urgent attention to help me and others like me.
In Norway, scientists have had some success treating patients with the immune-modulating drug Rituximab (used in Australia on leukemia patients). Their Prime Minister and their Department of Health recently apologised to patients with ME, saying “we have not established proper health care services for these people, and I regret that.”
Scientists at USA’s Columbia and Stanford universities and Australian scientists at Griffith University have found significant immune problems and identifiable immune signatures for chronic fatigue syndrome. Griffith University researchers have just patented a diagnostic blood test, bringing us closer to understanding the illness, but a treatment cannot happen without funding.
Dr Lipkin, Columbia University, believes if the appropriate financial resources were thrown at the problem, we could have treatments for the illness in five years.
I ask for equitable research funding for this painful, debilitating illness.
I ask for your help in requesting the NHMRC fund medical research into the illness, using the latest International Consensus Criteria for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (2012) and looking at the leading international research, perhaps contributing financially to an international study? At the moment most Australian doctors are using the outdated, inaccurate and possibly harmful  2002 Australian CFS criteria (if you are writing to a state or territory representative, consider changing this paragraph to services your state could provide).

I ask for doctors and medical professionals to be educated. Australia’s Emerge and the UK’s ME Association warns against how harmful exercise can be. Despite that, some Australian doctors are still using that outdated information, so we also need help educating doctors on the latest immune findings. How can we educate doctors and other medical professionals?
(here you may wish to add more about yourself, ie ‘It took me xx years/months to receive a diagnosis. I received helpful/unhelpful/outdated information’. You may want to add a short sentence about before illness: Instead of earning xx as a xx, I am now reliant on xx. I was involved in my community as a coach/volunteer/helping local school/in a band etc)

(Optional or adapt to your preference in state or federal letters) Could you also fund Emerge Australia to represent us nationally, like other illnesses are represented? They’ve done good work to help me yet they receive no federal or (insert your state, NSW/QLD etc) funding. Having a voice is important when we are too ill to advocate for ourselves.
(Optional in state letters – ask for a specific clinic like Queensland’s National Centre for Neuroimmunology. Mention your experiences with your state/territory’s health system.)
On May 12, International ME Awareness Day, will you wear a blue ribbon to show your support for people with the illness?

(Include any other concerns you have about housing or care, or concerns even if they aren’t about ME or CFS, for example NDIS, cuts to CSIRO, environmental laws, tax reform, ministerial code of conduct, education, foreign aid or trade, the introduction of laws on approving marijuana for pain relief etc)
I look forward to hearing from you.
(name)
 
You may wish to enclose some of these articles, depending on the content of your letter:

ME in one page -statistics relevant to Australia from Emerge Australia.
Australian Health Department pins its hopes on NIH research
ME Association’s ‘Patient reaction to the PACE trial letters published in The Lancet’.

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1 thought on “Australia: Write to the Health Minister”

  1. My application for NDIS was knocked back.
    I have severe ME/CFS amongst other conditions.
    I was told I wasn’t ill enough and if I can hold a conversation, or go for a walk I wasn’t ill enough
    And so many ridiculous things to write as I am in extreme pain and typing makes things worse.
    The person was ignorant, rude, minimising…
    And I had to have exhausted every treatment option
    These examples of what we’re said aren’t applied to other conditions that are eligible for NDIS
    I have been so ill, abused, recovering from homelessness… All as a result of my vulnerability due to being ill, not being recognised, and not getting support. My life matters and it matters that I get the support I need to have a life worth living.

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