I think it was suggested the other day we need a new charity. If reforming AfME like JE has suggested isn't the way to go, then I think that person was right.
Can someone post a link to that discussion/post please?
One such thread is here, where Nightsong insisted
"And we need a new national charity" as in:
============
"We are not going to make any progress until there is a national charity dedicated to a completely different model of care, because the signals that the NHS and the medical establishment are receiving from the charities are completely at odds with the very clear wishes of the broader patient community to receive genuine medical care (even if there is dispute amongst patients as to precisely what that care should include).
The broader patient community needs to be made aware of precisely what the charities are doing, and how negatively it will affect all of our lives.
And we need a new national charity."
"... ... It's also notable that
the charities seem to consider themselves to be arbiters of the NICE guideline, rather than advocating for what patients actually want & need ... ....
"The charities should be using the guideline as a cudgel where it is in patients' interests to do so but are in no way obliged to embrace its many flaws & compromises."
============
Also, I see the the MEA charity intention to signal throughout the NHS at complete odds with the original wording of our ME/CFS Guideline. And I see the MEA intent on superseding the Guideline where it does say what patients want and need.
Jonathan Edwards added that:
"ThereForME has been very vocal in calling for services and they are very clearly not supporting a psychobehavioural approach ....... .... I see the problem as being one of not understanding the logistics of medical service provision."
I changed my mind about inviting the ThereForME founders to replace Neil Riley, but the MEA might want to join ThereForME, once those clinics the MEA is now "supporting" to renew their contracts also get a grip, and grasp the current logistics of medical provision which will not afford their preposterous theoretical proposals.