Richard Smallfield
Established Member
Hi @Richard Smallfield, good to see you here
As others have said, it would be helpful with more detail on what exactly you're looking for, and also on what it's for, its purpose (to the extend you're at liberty to divulge), to build trust. While I've seen you around elsewhere online making sensible and constructive comment, and therefore assume your book-writing friend is equally sensible, most people here don't know you yet.
It may also help to edit the title of this thread to something along the lines of 'Help: need examples of ME study projects failing due to no funding' to help attract readers with relevant knowledge. I'm sure the mods would be happy to help you with this if necessary.
I'm not one of those readers with relevant knowledge but here are some top of my head potential lines of enquiry.
$$$ stopped: have there been research centers or the like that didn't get funding renewal (most likely US)?
$$$ diverted: also US, wasn't there something about a pot of money destined for ME research spent elsewhere? quite a few years back I think
$$$ not given to start studies: are there accessible records kept anywhere of grants applied for but denied? Otherwise it would be a tedious task of approaching individual researchers to find out. The charities who fund some research probably have records but their rejections are likely largely due to limited $$$. What would be really interesting to see is the reasons given for public money grant rejections and how ME grants were evaluated and by whom
There may be some useful info in this thread:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/usa-nih-national-institutes-of-health-news.18724/page-9
Thanks.
The book is by a friend (from long ago, when I was growing up) who is a professor of medical anthropology in the US. The book is on the effects of stigma associated with diagnosis and is under contract to a publisher.
She got in touch because ME/CFS is a relevant illness.
I’ve not been well enough to edit what I wrote a while ago and hope I’ll be able to get it done before she needs it.
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