In this media age, I guess more alarming photos are needed. There are so many severe case and of course, it is not clear if they would allow media into the house. But, alas, in this day and age, this gets attention.
I'm torn on this because illness doesn't look like anything. For all the "invisible illness" thing, it's pretty much a universal problem. What does cancer look like? It doesn't have a "look". Many people learn they have cancer a few weeks before they die precisely because it doesn't look like anything. The image people have of cancer isn't even cancer, it's the treatment.
Showing the disease is extremely difficult aside from severe patients, which itself is difficult for other reasons, the first of which is finding them. People are terrible at understanding the cascading effects of limitations they don't experience. "You spend your days in bed? Awesome!" No, think about that for a while and, no, it's definitely not even close to be awesome. One day, yeah, maybe, not for me but whatever. Years? Fuck no!
I think always it's the scale and severity that has an impact. The equivalent of a mid-sized country, hundreds of billions in economic burden, people usually taken in their youth, etc. This is work that takes serious communications skill to distill in a way that people understand. Even with the shoes we can't really show it well because it would literally millions of pairs of shoes to make it meaningful, people simply don't appreciate how gigantic the problem is, especially physicians.
It's the medical professionals we have to convince because it's their contempt for us that gives the green light for others (especially gullible journalists and skeptics) to treat us like dirt and it's their advice that convinces politicians to keep on ignoring us. Medicine has a veto over which diseases get taken seriously and it is exercising that veto to crush everything we do. How to do that I have no idea but until we have medicine on our side, this is a political issue and we don't have the capacity to do that.
Davis' words are powerful in that regard. They have to be amplified. Eminence matters, unfortunately, and in that regard the silent eminence on our side is many times more credible than the jerks who have built a career on crushing us, even the celebrity-physician whose claims to fame are major disasters.