I will be attending the meeting for a few hours tomorrow and giving my testimony at about 11:15 am. The committee has increased the time for public comment, with two public comment periods the first day and another on the second day - you can see the full agenda here.
And, they will be providing a live video streaming of the entire 2-day meeting! Just go to this link, and you can watch and listen live to any part of the meeting (or the whole thing).
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And, for a preview, here is my written testimony:
My name is Sue Jackson, and I have had ME/CFS since March
2002. Both of my sons, ages 14 and
18, have it also; they’ve both been sick for eight years. Today I would like to
focus on the urgent need to educate medical professionals, school
administrators, and the general public about the severe and debilitating
effects of ME/CFS, especially on children, teens, and young adults.
Every ME/CFS patient – no matter what their age – has his or
her own horror stories of being mistreated and misunderstood by medical
professionals, the very people we turn to for help and support. These abuses are even more appalling
when they happen to children and young people. The following examples from an online parents’ support group
illustrate the urgent need for education of both medical and educational
personnel.
One pediatrician told a young girl with ME/CFS that the
police would come and put her mother in jail if she did not get up and go to
school. Another pediatrician
evaluated this same girl for just 20 minutes and determined she was school
phobic and needed to take anti-depressants. A general practitioner told this same family that he didn’t
have time to read or research and dismissed them. Imagine the impact on a young, developing psyche of being
subjected to this kind of disbelief, derision, and lack of compassion over and
over.
A young man of 20 who’d had ME/CFS for several years and
suffered from the same kind of sleep dysfunction as millions of others with
ME/CFS sought the expertise of a sleep specialist. After testing, the doctor
told him he just needed to go to bed earlier. Then, this doctor proceeded to
review every previous medical decision and treatment the boy had tried and told
the family why each of them wouldn’t work (offering no alternatives). He grilled this family relentlessly for
a half hour. In the mother’s words, “My husband and son and I were so defeated
after that appointment that it was almost 2 years before we could start seeking
treatment options again. We just felt like no one believed us, and there was
nothing anyone could do.”
A mother whose three sons have all been diagnosed with
ME/CFS for over 10 years has a family “friend” who is a doctor who thinks she
is crazy and has accused her of Munchausen’s Syndrome because she has
tirelessly sought answers and help for her sons. Last year, after a decade of
doctors’ appointments and research, this mom finally discovered that two of her
sons have had Lyme disease and several other tick infections for many years.
A teen girl with ME/CFS saw an Infectious Disease specialist
at a children’s hospital who berated her for using a wheelchair in order to
manage occasional outings to the mall. He said that when his four-year old
asked to be carried, he did not pick her up but made her walk so she would not
develop any bad habits. The teenager left that appointment in tears after
having her severe illness compared to a tired preschooler. That same doctor told another teen
girl, "Stop thinking about it, go to school, and it will go away!"
One mom who had learned about Orthostatic Intolerance took
measurements of her daughter’s heart rate while standing and presented the data
to their doctor, along with listing other common OI symptoms her daughter was
experiencing such as itchy-feeling legs when standing. The doctor dismissed her
data, saying contemptuously, “My heart rate would go up if my mother was
standing next to me measuring it, too!” Then he told the girl to put some
lotion on her itchy legs and “go back to school tomorrow!”
Our own family has been fortunate not to encounter such
blatant ignorance or contempt from doctors, only because we were able to see
top CFS specialists like Dr. David Bell and Dr. Susan Levine. In addition, our family doctor
understands CFS and has other patients with it, and our pediatrician was very
open-minded and willing to learn, spending hours on the phone with Dr. Peter
Rowe to learn how to diagnose and treat Orthostatic Intolerance. They are the exceptions.
Most kids with ME/CFS and their parents have had similar
horrifying experiences with school personnel. That girl whose doctor refused to even consider Orthostatic
Intolerance did finally get a diagnosis of POTS from another doctor. When that diagnosis was presented to
school officials, they asked the school psychologist if she agreed with the
POTS diagnosis. She responded
derisively, “I agree that her doctor says she has POTS.”
Another teen girl with ME/CFS who was an honor student in
her high school became much sicker while her underlying infections of EBV,
HHV-6, and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever were being treated. Her parents
requested that she be allowed to drop two of her AP classes in order to lighten
her load and allow her to graduate on time. In response, school officials demanded that she attend an
exam the next day, though she was sick in bed with a high fever at the time.
Our younger son’s ME/CFS diagnosis was met with contempt by
his elementary school nurse. She insisted that Craig couldn’t have CFS because
“he looks fine on the days when he comes to school.” Despite a letter from our
pediatrician specifically stating that Craig had been diagnosed with CFS, the
school nurse continued to tell the principal that he did not have a diagnosis.
Even worse, she actually called our pediatrician and reprimanded her over the
phone for 45 minutes for her diagnosis. The following year, she was named
School Nurse of the Year for our district.
You rock, Sue! Thank you so much for your tireless efforts, not only to care for your children, but also for standing up for so many of who have children with CFS, or have it ourselves. I was just encouraging my 18-year-old to read your blog as you are quite an amazing role model. Thank you so much and I'll be thinking of your tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteThis is really good, Sue and Thank You too for doing this and speaking out for all our youngsters.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your advocacy Sue!
ReplyDeleteWOW this is awesome! Thank you for doing this.
ReplyDeleteThis was fantastic testimony, Sue! Very powerful and effective, and your delivery was great.
ReplyDeleteAmazing (and awful) testimony. Thank you for sharing it with us, and with them. Hopefully it gets through to someone who can do something about it.
ReplyDelete