What would be useful [UK] local level advocacy actions?

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)
I have the opportunity to give a presentation on ME/CFS to the local branch of the political party that I am a member of, and while I may not have the resources to take advantage of it, it did start me to wonder what local level advocacy 'asks' I could I make at the end of the presentation. Obviously there are the large structural issues like better research funding and medical care but I'm more thinking of things that individuals who might be inspired by a presentation can do themselves.

Any and all ideas appreciated.
 
Focusing on local services is probably what I’d do. For a local political party the council may therefore be a good focus, especially with their responsibility for social care.

I’m not sure what the precise asks would be but focusing on the situation of severely affected and abandonment by GPs, hospitals and councils could be one angle?

Or maybe looking at it more widely as a lack of accessibility to those local services for people with ME/CFS?

Local parties often have a focus on problems with those services and the wider population/electorate so awareness of the particular exclusion of us may be useful.

Could sharing things like our factsheets with GP practices, council representatives etc be one ask? Or even just with other community groups party members may be active in?
 
The main one for us is Social Services. Getting appropriate training material into the hands of social workers so that they don't do inappropriate things to sufferers (like they did with Maeve Bootby O'Niell) would be useful as would local care options and special equipment like special beds. Something else that came up in the Maeve inquest was the hand off from hospital to district nursing and social services both of which completely failed and that should all be under council funding.

ME awareness day and blue lighting and any potential things they can do to increase awareness and point people at providing charitable funding to the ME charities for research.

I have a local issue where I have some mercury filled lights that I replaced with LED tube lights but unfortunately my council wont pick them up, suggesting I just walk them to the drop off site myself. They don't allow commercial waste disposal at the collection site so it forces me to go private and they want hundreds for the collection. This is just basic ablism and the assumption that everyone can walk or drive to where they need to go and I am sure it applies to a lot of council services where they don't offer to your house service.

Building works and road work which can cause significant harm to ME patients with the noise. I doubt anyone is going to actually change this but its worth raising that right now they have no register of ME patients in their area but will have many thousands and they are hurting them with significant noise and doing so with no warning those patients will ever be able to see. Planning permission being a poster on the road again is pretty ableist, assumes everyone can just walk out to the lamp post and will see these notices.
 
I have the opportunity to give a presentation on ME/CFS to the local branch of the political party that I am a member of, and while I may not have the resources to take advantage of it, it did start me to wonder what local level advocacy 'asks' I could I make at the end of the presentation. Obviously there are the large structural issues like better research funding and medical care but I'm more thinking of things that individuals who might be inspired by a presentation can do themselves.

Any and all ideas appreciated.
I will have a careful think but yes it gets complicated about where to begin as the right message is as important as to who and where given I'd imagine the 'getting done' will involve talking to whoever itself and then the palaver where they convince said politician of eg the solution being to get us all to CBT and noone will need to worry

However off the top of my head I think the most important first steps are indeed:
- slowly getting proper allies who understand both the condition properly and then some very specific asks (and that the current bacme/iapt/bps offering is neither helpful nor cheap in as far as how much funding goes into those bps kingdoms and research overall) that somewhat describe the can't win space that most of us live just trying to survive due to misinformation vs both actual support and day-to-day things that crop up

Sounds small but I think there is an 'ad populous' effect going on where things go backwards because those believing in certain ideas are most vocal so everyone assumes that's the truth and so when anyone presents with a problem they look like they've a motivation issue without trying to explain how the illness makes sorting it themselves impossible (why can't you just make the phone call yourself?) and how these seemingly nice people are inadvertently making things impossible because they've been misinformed that we aren't that ill etc.

I do get however that we need 'the list' to try and describe why that matters and the problem is that 'it's everything' from employers, to retailers to services of all kind and so on. And the varies in severity and situation as to what will crop up next and for whom.

We probably need the below to actually even help us in articulating and being believed on some of these issues to get across 'the nub'.

- getting local advocates who are specific to ME/CFS. I can't find a way around this, and it needs to be assured that these are going to continue to be people who won't over the years end up doing their own thing or coming up with 'helpful ideas' along bps lines because someone suggest it helps.

There seem to be ones specific to autism or learning disability or other illnesses in certain areas - I don't know if there are any good models as you just hear the odd good anecdote. But they seem to have consistent people who will be able to do the talking for various issues that are likely to come up eg school meetings or whatnot.

Sadly it is impossible to nevigate most/many(?) services due to misinformation but then most 'help' provided generically to cover everyone who might struggle has been taught the misinformation badly enough that it not only takes as much time educating said 'help' but that help is only allowed 'x amount of time per person' and/or they get put off when what we try and tell them about cfs not being treated by cbt then we get quietly dumped. SO that becomes an added waste/suck.

In some of these cases the most important thing we need is also witnesses who know enough about the basics they aren't going to side with the person suggesting we just 'try and do a bit more each day, then we don't need x' and come back to us thinking they are bringing good news having 'talked for us'.

Even paying for a service doesn't mean we don't get that energy waste so there is nowhere for us to go. And we'd need so many more hours not due to fault of our own to sort issues either due to explaining the illness but also the disbelief issues and why x is an issue.

And without that we can't access the actual services themselves, which we need advocates for.

I also get the impression that if we had consistent witnesses and advocates they would begin to see the pattern, consistency in what gets thrown at different pwme or they could even do a mystery shop to test that could be advocated for not 'being us'. where everything might be hidden under claims of 'reading into it, maybe they didn't mean it that way' and the oversensitive trope cleverly (and I've noticed the game of attrition of energy is used a lot knowing you can't reply to correct a 'this is summary of conversation' email that is false for example) when someone is only seeing it happen to one individual. Eventually what happens can be so preposterous they look mad for telling it.

But also if we had a dedicated proper advocate service that could really be trusted then they could cut a lot of the describing work because there will be common issues. So you suddenly have someone who gets what a neighbour or building projects noise will do to someone with severe ME/CFS and what might be possible, or how moving parking will make something previously accessible into something inaccessible for a pwme, or wheelchair services or even shops work and if there needs to be a new framework that fits ME/CFS etc. or a service that can offer the middle-ground and give advice so people don't waste their money and energy buying something wrong and the issue of how that might be transported.

It could have a list of trusted suppliers like AgeUK does for tradesmen or whatnot and help sheets both ways to ease communication and what is involved with certain tasks.
 
This is just a random idea but it’s “quick and dirty” one I was able to deploy once in the past.

I collect memes about ME in a folder. I can put together a collection of them in minutes. It can give an overview of the challenges we face, the things which affect us, the unseen and unheard struggles etc in a one frame graphic.
I also think the fact people bother to make graphics shows that it’s something people in the community experience/discuss.

I think the combination of graphic/humour and the way it gets straight to a point is a great combination to communicate some messages, plus it’s less dry than the usual detailed structural issues, and more about the human experience. Other people don’t know what it’s “like” and this gives a flavour of it.
 
This is just a random idea but it’s “quick and dirty” one I was able to deploy once in the past.

I collect memes about ME in a folder. I can put together a collection of them in minutes. It can give an overview of the challenges we face, the things which affect us, the unseen and unheard struggles etc in a one frame graphic.
I also think the fact people bother to make graphics shows that it’s something people in the community experience/discuss.

I think the combination of graphic/humour and the way it gets straight to a point is a great combination to communicate some messages, plus it’s less dry than the usual detailed structural issues, and more about the human experience. Other people don’t know what it’s “like” and this gives a flavour of it.
Only if you want to and have the energy. But I’d be interested in seeing this folder :)
 
Do you have cloud storage somewhere?
Proton Drive/Google Drive/Dropbox etc have features to share folders.


Amazing thanks!
Yeah I am not set up for those at this moment in time sorry, I’ll come back to you when I’ve got it sorted
 

Attachments

  • IMG_5219.jpeg
    IMG_5219.jpeg
    25.3 KB · Views: 1
Back
Top Bottom