I don’t like to be too negative but I have some concerns with this:Around 250,000 adults and children have M.E. in the UK and that number is likely to be an underestimate and it is growing. Currently:
Action for M.E. believes that this neglect of people with M.E. is unacceptable.
- Less than 4% of people with M.E. are able to access specialist M.E. services due to a lack of provision
- Less than 0.03% of research grants from the UK government are awarded to M.E. research
There are 385,000 people already at risk of developing M.E. as they fail to recover from Long Covid after a year. While we are pleased to see considerable funding for research and healthcare support for people with Long Covid, it has shone a light on the lack of investment into M.E. and the lack of services and treatment available.
This petition will be running until the end of October, at which point we will take it to the UK Governments.
Please share our Equity for M.E. petition as widely as you can.
I think the 'recognition' point is relevant because long covid is recognised as a biological post viral illness, not a psychological illness, which again moves us forward a step.
I don't think that's universally the case I'm afraid.
I think certain parties are already gearing up the BPS machine for those who fail.to recover from LC and it is certainly possible that if they haven't pulled their socks up and recovered within a year or so they'll find themselves at a fatigue clinic pacing up.
I'm rather puzzled that this petition is on SurveyMonkey, not a petitions website. It looks like it's dual purpose, with invitations for people to sign up for AfME activities as well.
That's really an issue. Most of the LC "research" funded so far in the UK is junk, frankly barely qualifies as research. This has to come with a call for increased standards in the area of chronic illness research and clinical provisions. Not just more, but better. And to emphasize: not 10% better or even 50% better but 10x better just to begin with. In fact the current crop of clinics, both LC and ME, can basically be pointed at as the example for mediocre standards that need to be raised massively.4) From memory, the NIHR has spent, or agreed to spend, about £20million on LC research (mostly low quality). That is nowhere near enough. The NIH in the US has pledged to spend $1.15 billion.
That's already what the NIH are saying so it's a safe bet.Is there a risk that such a petition could be counter productive? If the powers that be decide Long Covid and ME are more or less the same thing, could they think ‘as we are spending so much on Long Covid research there is no need to spend on ME’?
Most of the LC "research" funded so far in the UK is junk, frankly barely qualifies as research.
But currently I think they are recognised as being physically ill in the news media etc, examples being the number of prominent figures who have come forward to talk of their condition, which is not often the case with ME. Fauci and others have given prominence to their view of long covid as a post viral illness.
I do think they are at risk however, maybe even more so if the BPS clinics for ME are closed/ reallocated/ whatever.
I hope you're right. I thought that public perception of Long Covid was that it's more "physical" than ME.My impression is that if the new NICE ME/CFS Guideline is similar to the draft, anyone who meets the diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS following Covid-19 will be less likely to be subjected to CBT/GET if they are diagnosed with ME/CFS instead of Long Covid.
And surely it should be considered that the best place to host it would be as a petition to the U.K. Parliament website hitch if reaches 10,000 signatures it has to be debated.