United Kingdom: ME Association news

There is another one (apologies if it has also been posted already) 'Move for ME'

NB this isn't an MEA campaign but them flagging one that seems to be by someone else:



for those not on fb the cut and paste without the slides:

Calling all friends and family of the ME Association
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Catherine Asta, who has ME/CFS, has launched ‘Move for ME’ to increase awareness of ME/CFS this May and help raise £10,000 for the MEA!
Get involved however you can—walk, stretch, dance, picnic, or share a cuppa with friends. Wear blue and spread the word
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Donate or learn more: https://www.justgiving.com/campaign/moveforme
Inspired by her daughter, she shares: "She asked me “if you could swap bodies with me and be in my body for the day, what would you do?” I replied saying “I’d go for a run, swim, hike up to the moor and mooch around our town. I’d get a dog and take it for long walks and I’d meet up with my friends in a cafe or go explore somewhere new”'
"I cannot walk, run, swim, hike, cycle, travel, explore, gather or move the way I once could and it's the small things that I miss the most. So this ME Awareness Month, I’m asking you to MoveForME."
#MoveForME #pwME #MECFS #MEAwarenessMonth


One of the slides says "every act represents the freedom and participation that those with ME are unable to achieve"

I get the nuance intended to be conveyed here by adding that, perhaps if being pedantic switching the last word 'achieve' for 'enjoy' maybe, I don't know.... but there are earlier posts, the last one of which does emphasise they are no longer able to do any of the walk, run etc in the text so is quite nuanced.

I have noticed that there was an earlier post at the start of May, which has a picture of the campaigner here for info:



cut and past of text for those not on fb:

Ilkley Chat: Ilkley campaigner with ME/CFS launches ‘Move for ME’ to raise £10k
"Catherine Asta, from Ilkley, who has ME/CFS, has launched a new national campaign, ‘Move for ME’, to increase awareness during ME Awareness Month this May and to help raise £10,000 for The ME Association, a charity that has supported her throughout her illness."
https://www.ilkleychat.co.uk/.../ilkley-campaigner-with...
Thank you Catherine for helping to support the ME Association!
Want to support the campaign? Get involved: https://www.justgiving.com/campaign/moveforme

and one in April too, which has more context and nuance again:


copy and paste of text for those not on fb:
Yorkshire campaigner with ME/CFS launches ‘Move for ME’ to raise £10,000 for the ME Association!
Catherine Asta, from Ilkley, Yorkshire, has navigated life with ME/CFS alongside a recent neurodivergent diagnosis, and surviving breast cancer – experiences that have shaped her life.

"I can no longer walk, run, swim, hike, cycle, travel, explore, gather or move the way I once could. So, this ME Awareness month, I’m asking friends, families, colleagues and communities to Move for ME, to do one small movement in any way they can."

"Seeing people move for me helps me feel less invisible. It reminds me, and others living with ME/CFS, that our lives still matter, even when we can’t participate in the world the way we once did"
Find out more about Catherine and get involved or donate!
https://meassociation.org.uk/3ttc
 
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This might be better on the Bath and North Somerset Clinic page, but as it is about the LC clinic consultaiton and it seems a very short deadline (particularly given it is perhaps pwme or at least LC) for the survey, and is on the MEA fb I have put here for now



There are 2 comments there, but I had to put 'all comments' on to see them.

Is this the same clinic that has Pete Gladwell?

for those note on fb the cut and paste:

Sharing for information: Bath and North East Somerset, Swindon & Wiltshire Integrated Care Board (BSW ICB) is currently reviewing the Long Covid service
SURVEY CLOSING DATE TBC (it is a 4 week consultation)
BSW ICB say: "The aim of the propo
sed change is to continue to provide appropriate support to people with Long COVID while responsibly using NHS resources across BSW. Public feedback on the proposed change is essential before a final decision is made."

If you live in around this area, you can take the survey here:
https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx...
More information here: https://bsw.icb.nhs.uk/longcovidservice/
 
There is another one (apologies if it has also been posted already) 'Move for ME'

NB this isn't an MEA campaign but them flagging one that seems to be by someone else:






One of the slides says "every act represents the freedom and participation that those with ME are unable to achieve"

I get the nuance intended to be conveyed here by adding that, perhaps if being pedantic switching the last word 'achieve' for 'enjoy' maybe, I don't know..

I have noticed that there was an earlier post at the start of May, which has a picture of the campaigner here for info:
I mean, I suppose if an individual has started a “move for ME” campaign that’s one thing, but why are all these campaigns a bit…off?
Walk for ME…ok someone else does the walk, except sometimes it’s someone recovered
Move for ME except you’re also supposed to do something moving
Seeds of Hope, heavy on the actual seeds and the general “hope”


Shouldn’t people be doing stuff more like “I’m doing a marathon pushing a bed, because my friend/sister is bedbound”

I think something like a social media campaign “25” and we all change our picture to a 25 to raise awareness of the 25% who have severe/very severe and zero medical support would be fairly easy/inclusive/effective and people doing their own challenges could wear a 25. People need to focus. These ideas wouldn’t make a decent campaigning organisation/charities shortlist in my experience.
 
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I mean, I suppose if an individual has started a “move for ME” campaign that’s one thing, but why are all these campaigns a bit…off?
Walk for ME…ok someone else does the walk, except sometimes it’s someone recovered
Move for ME except you’re also supposed to do something moving
Seeds of Hope, heavy on the actual seeds and the general “hope”


Shouldn’t people be doing stuff more like “I’m doing a marathon pushing a bed, because my friend/sister is bedbound”

I think something like a social media campaign “25” and we all change our picture to a 25 to raise awareness of the 25% who have severe/very severe and zero medical support would be fairly easy/inclusive/effective and people doing their own challenges could wear a 25. People need to focus. These ideas wouldn’t make a decent campaigning organisation/charities shortlist in my experience.

Yes it becomes tricky/more unfortunate when you see them in a 'collective' (I hesitated pasting in case of guns being jumped and hoped the NB that it was an individual would be prominent enough, but it is context for eg the twitter response to the colouring in one perhaps to know what else is also on there recently) as carefully crafted nuance in one can then get obscured by patterns across a few that miss said angles

- and of course individuals who are pwme are doing brilliantly for setting something up, and won't know what others are doing to see how they all are side-by-side each other so to speak so it is an awkward conversation.

I guess there might be ways to 'lead the way' on messaging if a main charity without critiquing as a future thought?
 
of course individuals who are pwme are doing brilliantly for setting something up
I agree, it's great when people raise money for charity in ways that are meaningful to them. In this one, the aim is clear, it highlights what she's lost to the disease, and it doesn't patronise other people with ME/CFS.

Unlike the MEA, who seem to be developing a specialism in tone deafness. They have marketing professionals to design their campaigns, yet a woman who's very unwell manages comes up with something better.

They could at least send out chia seeds, so we could have our hope on toast. The bag of John Innes No 1 we'd need for flower seeds weighs about 20 kilos.
 
I think the message is a bit complicated when it’s “someone else doing a thing a pwME can’t but also pwME can join in doing a thing” can we do it or not? what is ME taking away from us?
Also probably just rankles as it reminds me of the Neil Riley carry on “we need to move!” Stop making us do things, and go run a GWAS or something. I’m not helping the MEA raise 10k so they can spend it on colouring sheets and 100+ question PROMS.
 
If anyone is still donating to MEA, why? What useful work is it doing?

Collating service reviews is, as others have said, an important indictment of the shocking standards of NHS provision. But surely this activity is fatally undermined by MEA giving the providers of the bad services a tool which distorts user experience but which could be used to claim that bad reviews are unrepresentative?

MEA decided that being grown ups meant constructive engagement with the Big Bad Wolf. Inevitably, the Big Bad Wolf has eaten grandma and is eyeing its next meal. What big PROMs you have, grandma…

No doubt there are still sensible people involved, but their only reasonable course now is to flee from the house “in any way you can” and to come back with a (metaphorical) axe.
 
Research: Pregnancy in ME/CFS: Stage II Funding

The faMEly study: A Study of ME/CFS, Family Planning, Pregnancy and Raising Children, has reached the end of its initial funding period and Stage II funding has now been granted by the ME Association.

Find out more about the study aims, key findings to date and the next steps:


Thank you to our incredible supporters and fundraisers. It's because of you that we are able to continue funding research into ME/CFS and Long Covid.

#MECFS #MyalgicEncephalomyelitis #Pregnancy #Research #RamsayResearchFund
 
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Quotes:

ME Association

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H4ME Bulletin: The DHSC Delivery Plan includes a commitment for NHS England to create a template service specification on the management of people with ME/CFS. Once finalised, this template will directly influence how NHS services are commissioned and delivered across England, making it a significant opportunity to improve care for everyone living with ME/CFS.
The ME Association's Healthcare for ME team, working alongside our Medical Adviser, is actively participating in the Health Services Subgroup convened by Forward-ME. This group is engaged in ongoing discussions with the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) on the development of a national template service specification for ME/CFS.
At this stage, we are unable to share the contents of the draft specification, as it remains under development.
Read the full statement: https://meassociation.org.uk/80rp
#health #MECFS #MyalgicEncephalomyelitis

___________________

There was also a ministerial action point in the DHSC Delivery Plan to explore the need for some form of national specialist referral service for people with very severe ME/CFS.
As noted in this posting, the Forward ME sub group on NHS services is working with the DHSC and NHS England on the other action point re developing a template service specification for people with mild and moderate ME/CFS. We have been successful in persuading them to include those with severe ME/CFS in this template. The work on this is now quite advanced.
Unfortunately, we have been unable to obtain any meaningful information regarding what is happening to the development of some form of national referral service for people with very severe ME/CFS and who is involved. And in view of the recent ministerial announcement relating to a delay in this work it appears that very little progress has been made.
Following communication with the DHSC DP team we will soon be submitting information on the numbers that may be involved along with the definition and medical assessment of people with very severe ME/CFS, especially in relation to nutritional assessment and hospital admissions.
Two other groups are working on separate inputs regarding the management of those with very severe ME/CFS and the provision of information and advocacy for people who are having urgent problems relating to hospital admissions
So there is a lot of important work in progress relating to the care and management of people with very severe ME/CFS
Dr Charles Shepherd
Hon Medical Adviser MEA
 

MEA article:

Health Services Update: Draft National Service Specification for ME/CFS​

By Karren Winters-Cavalot / May 7, 2026
The DHSC Delivery Plan includes a commitment for NHS England to create a template service specification on the management of people with ME/CFS. Once finalised, this template will directly influence how NHS services are commissioned and delivered across England, making it a significant opportunity to improve care for everyone living with ME/CFS.

The ME Association's Healthcare for ME team, working alongside our Medical Adviser, is actively participating in the Health Services Subgroup convened by Forward-ME. This group is engaged in ongoing discussions with the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) on the development of a national template service specification for ME/CFS.

At this stage, we are unable to share the contents of the draft specification, as it remains under development. However, we have contributed detailed feedback alongside charity representatives, clinicians, and people with lived experience. Our input has spanned a wide range of areas, including but not limited to clinical coding, medicines management, and the needs of those most severely affected. You can read about a previous meeting with the DHSC and NHS England to discuss progress on the preparation of a clinical care pathway here.

We will continue working with lived-experience advocates, clinical experts, and charitable organisations to push for the changes that people with ME/CFS need and deserve. The template remains under revision, and we are committed to engaging throughout this process to ensure that the final version reflects the realities of living with ME/CFS and addresses patients' needs.
 
I am still not convinced that the advocacy charities have a grasp of the medical problem.
This is an extraordinary position for patients to be in. What can be done? Do we need some sort of medical summit with charities invited? With some sort of moderated/facilitated discussion?

I remember reading years ago at various structured ways of trying to move impasses forward, such as identifying the minimum level of agreement on contentious topics where full agreement wasn't possible, and I wonder if a similar approach might help - and might help get to the bottom of the disagreement.
 
This is an extraordinary position for patients to be in. What can be done? Do we need some sort of medical summit with charities invited? With some sort of moderated/facilitated discussion?

I remember reading years ago at various structured ways of trying to move impasses forward, such as identifying the minimum level of agreement on contentious topics where full agreement wasn't possible, and I wonder if a similar approach might help - and might help get to the bottom of the disagreement.
I don’t think the charities want to criticise the NHS.

I don’t think they have a firm “ask” in terms of what they want the NHS to provide, so they’re stuck in the “don't rock the boat, otherwise they will fall out with us, might as well keep what we have it’s better than nothing”.
 
I don’t think they have a firm “ask” in terms of what they want the NHS to provide
We don't want anything new or unusual, just the same as everyone else: consultant-led clinics with physicians and specialist nurses. Any other 'discipline' is unnecessary and inappropriate.

might as well keep what we have it’s better than nothing
Yup. And they need to realise it's worse than nothing.

It offers no treatment or benefits, it puts patients at risk of harm—directly but also indirectly, by ensuring doctors are kept away from patients and therefore learn nothing about the disease. And it's a criminal waste of taxpayers' money.
 
I don’t think the charities want to criticise the NHS.
You might be right, but I can't see why they wouldn't want to criticise the NHS when it's doing a bad job for PwME.
I don’t think they have a firm “ask” in terms of what they want the NHS to provide, so they’re stuck in the “don't rock the boat, otherwise they will fall out with us, might as well keep what we have it’s better than nothing”.
And yet they're being handed a firm ask on a plate. I just don't get it.
 
You might be right, but I can't see why they wouldn't want to criticise the NHS when it's doing a bad job for PwME.

And yet they're being handed a firm ask on a plate. I just don't get it.
I don’t think they see it as doing a bad job, just that they need to do “better” and we know how the MEA wants to achieve that. More PROMS.

Where are they being handed a firm “ask” on a plate? We might have ideas here, but we are not “all patients”. The ME community doesn’t have a firm ask. Plenty in the community don’t mind what the charities or NHS are doing (not sick long enough to have realised it’s bunkum). Even ThereForME which is aimed entirely at getting the NHS to provide care for us doesn’t agree with what we think.
 
Where are they being handed a firm “ask” on a plate? We might have ideas here, but we are not “all patients”. The ME community doesn’t have a firm ask. Plenty in the community don’t mind what the charities or NHS are doing (not sick long enough to have realised it’s bunkum). Even ThereForME which is aimed entirely at getting the NHS to provide care for us doesn’t agree with what we think.
Good point. Maybe we need a summit to win hearts and minds of other PwME?
 
Good point. Maybe we need a summit to win hearts and minds of other PwME?
To convince them that there’s no point having an ME service?
To convince them the current system is a fallacy and helps mainly the NHS employees more than patients?
To convince them that a specialist consultant under which discipline should be in charge? Neuro? Infectious Diseases?
There isn’t a firm ask.
 
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