Category: Advocacy

What next for the NICE guidelines?

Parliament Plays NICE #MEAction UK was thrilled to watch the longest ever UK parliamentary debate about ME on 21st June, after working so hard alongside so many others to make it happen. The three hour debate in Westminster Hall about treatment and research reflected a seismic shift in political understanding of ME. It was an

Read More »

Volunteer of the Month: a Scottish Trio

This month we want to honor the work of three women with #MEAction Scotland – Emma Shorter, Kim Gurav and Janet Sylvester –  who have done an incredible job advocating for people with myalgic encephalomyelitis. The partnership began last January when Kim and Janet wanted to organise a screening of Unrest, which – long story short!

Read More »

Next steps: a letter to our community

Hi everyone, I just wanted to take a moment to comment on some of the confusion and concern of these last few weeks and offer some steps forward to help clarify how #MEAction works, what our core value are, and how we plan to make concrete our policy positions going forward. We are not a

Read More »

NIH Director: Our Judge and Jury, Prison Guard and Executioner

An anonymous testimony given before the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Advisory Committee (CFSAC), which met last week for its bi-annual meeting to discuss recommendations to make to the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) on issues related to Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and chronic fatigue syndrome.  *Note, an anonymous person gave this testimony. #MEAction has published it but did not

Read More »

Mother Shares Heartbreaking Testimony about Sons with Severe ME

This mother has participated in CFSAC meetings more than 20 times in an effort to get the Health and Human Services to take appropriate action to address this health crisis. Her two sons have suffered from severe Myalgic Encephalomyelitis for more than a decade. The photo was taken of her sons one month and one day before ME devastated

Read More »

Read 'Invest in ME's' Parliamentary Briefing

UK charity Invest in ME has written a briefing for the 21 June Westminster Hall debate that calls for £20 million in funding for biomedical research for five years. The briefing also provides an excellent summary of the disease and the challenges patients face accessing appropriate care.   [maxbutton id=”16″ url=”http://investinme.org/Documents/Fact%20Sheets/Status%20of%20Research,%20Treatment%20and%20Perception%20of%20Myalgic%20Encephalomyelitis%202018.pdf” text=”Read the briefing” ]

Read More »

Clarification about our Senate Resolution for ME/CFS

This is a letter to the community from #MEAction, Solve ME/CFS, and MassCFIDS about our recent U.S. congressional work. Dear Friends, We want to clarify an important issue about our recent advocacy work. After two years of fierce advocacy by our community, we are thrilled that Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts has now introduced a

Read More »

US: Watch the CFS Advisory meeting – this Wed. and Thurs.

Representatives from across federal agencies will convene for the next two days – tomorrow, June 20th and June 21st – for the bi-annual Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Advisory Committee (CFSAC) meeting. CFSAC is an important committee that provides advice and recommendations to the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) on issues related to Myalgic Encephalomyelitis

Read More »

Two things to do ahead of Thursday’s Parliament debate

A 3-hour Westminster Hall debate on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) treatment and research has been scheduled for Thursday, 21st June, 1:30-4:30 p.m (You’ll be able to watch the live stream here). We want to encourage as many of our MPs as possible to attend and use this as an opportunity to raise the visibility of ME! Here’s

Read More »

Read the new parliamentary briefing

Next Thursday, Parliament will hold a 3-hour Westminster Hall debate on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis treatment and research in a monumental victory for the ME community. In preparation for the debate, #MEAction UK volunteers prepared a parliamentary briefing along with three other charities – ME Association, Action for M.E., and the ME Trust. (Learn more about how

Read More »
Scroll to Top