Watch the full 40-minute ME/CFS testimony (includes a patient, parent, doctor and possibly others) to the Alaskan Congress hearing here
https://www.akleg.gov/basis/Meeting/Detail?Meeting=SHSS 2025-02-11 15:30:00
I transcribed some snippets from all the guest speakers:
David Penn
Hi, I'm David Penn. I'm a family medicine physician here in Anchorage and hospital physician. I'm going to talk to myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome. I'm not an expert. In fact, there's very few experts in the country. There's none in the state and a few in the world.
It's unknown to most of the population, and it's unknown in the medical community as well. I'm a physician and I didn't know about it when my own partner became ill with the disease. It took a few years to get the diagnosis.
Those episodes of post-exertional malaise have the capacity to lower one's baseline, and so one of the key things one has to do is avoid entering into post-exertional malaise episodes, and the only way to do that is through knowledge. So this proposal has the ability to improve people's lives and improve functional capacity among people who end up with this disease.
The date of May 12th was selected by an American advocate in the early 90s. It correlates with the birthday of Florence Nightingale: amongst other things, the founder of modern nursing. She actually, later in her life, acquired a chronic neuroimmune disease and was bedridden. Medical historians believe it was likely ME/CFS.
Hollis Mickey
I've lost my life thriving here in Alaska as an educator, an arts administrator, a practicing artist, as well as a professor at UAA. I biked to work and hiked every weekend in the summer. I was an avid amateur skiier in the winter. But five years ago everything changed, and now any significant cognitive effort, like presenting now, writing or reading an email, can trigger the escalation of symptoms that can last for hours, days, and even weeks. [...] Despite the devastating nature of this disease, patients like me often have to navigate their healthcare on their own, due to the significant lack of awareness in both the medical profession and wider community of this disease.
Sallie Rediske
In the near 50 years of me having this, I've only run into three healthcare providers, other than the two ME/CFS providers that I see outside, that have even known what the name meant. And none of the three actually knew what to do with it. So this is a very powerful opportunity to begin to remedy this situation for a NOT rare illness that is rarely diagnosed, and begin to give Alaskans an opportunity to receive management strategies here in the state.
Donna Aderhold
Many in my community are surprised to learn I'm dealing with health issues that affect my ability to think and function. When I'm out in the world I look fine. What people do not see are the days I'm unable to get off the couch or complete a simple sentence. On those days, I hide from the world. I plan my life around this illness.
Simonetta Mignano
[My friend] was forced to detach herself physically from every aspect of her life in order to manage the effects of this disease. It was horrifying, and still is, to see her struggle.
Michael Dickerson
[Referring to previous speaker Hollis] I've seen her unable to enjoy most of the creative efforts for which she has been deservedly recognized. Her pain and loss are acute and chronic, but so is the loss of her wise leadership in her community, her unique voice as an artist, and her encouragement and support as a friend. I'm not alone in lamenting the loss of this one member of our community to ME, but the cost of this disease to society extends well beyond arts and education, well beyond Alaska. Millions of people suffer from ME, so it is fitting that we pay attention to them.
Francesca DuBrock
I went from having a vibrant friend and colleague, to watching her decline visibly over the summer of 2022. [...] I haven't seen her since a brief visit we had in her driveway in the summer of 2023. In the intervening years, I have watched her struggle with an excruciating series of treatments that worsened her overall baseline and caused untold anguish. Friends, family, and carers are faced with a horrible sense of powerlessness in the face of so many unknowns and the lack of research and treatment for this disease.
Mercedes Harness
My child's health challenges began escalating a year ago after two previous years of being sick, we sought diagnostics and treatments across Alaska. I was repeatedly told that kids get sick a lot. Our concerns were routinely minimized. Listening to all the speakers today, I'm realizing that my child is ten, and she's lost her childhood from being home sick.
Sara Tabbert
I now have two friends of widely different ages, living in different parts of the country, experiencing different severity of the condition, who are both in need of much more support and understanding than they're able to find. I'm old enough now to have watched a number of friends and family members struggle with devastating conditions from cancer to severe mental illness to AIDS. I have to say that seeing someone with severe ME may be the hardest to watch. There's no relief, there's little understanding, and as a friend, the things that you might normally do to comfort or help only run the risk of making them sicker.
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