Why are we allowing early-stage sufferers to die?

Emily's disease started out mildly. Emily died at age 30.

Here is Emily telling us her story:

My entire future, and the greatly improved health I so long for, however, currently hinges on luck alone. … This wretched, ugly disease is made all the more so through the scandalous lack of research into its most severe form and the lack of necessary, appropriate support for those suffering from it.
— Emily Collingridge

There is still no research into its most severe form. There is still no support.

However, the key points for this article are these:

Emily's disease started out mildly. Emily died at age 30.

Four consequences

If we understand Emily's story, then we understand:

  1. The fact that progressive nature exists (hoping that you will not get sicker will not protect you)
  2. The fact that early-stage sufferers of the same disease exist (dissing them by assuming with insufficient evidence that they have a different disease will not make them advocate better)
  3. The fact that late-stage sufferers exist (science needs them)
  4. The fact that deaths exist (the world does not know this)

If we are rational, then we understand those things. If we are serious, then we incorporate them into our beings.


Most sufferers and most advocates have not done so.

Real movement

To me, it is the acknowledgement of other people that makes a real movement. By "real" I mean effective.

That should be good enough reason.

But that's not all:

  1. Emily did not switch diseases when she got sicker

The consequences are profound:

Explaining only early-stage does not explain anything. Advocating only early-stage does not advocate anything. Studying only early-stage does not study anything.1

Those actions do not help early-stage sufferers. They kill them. Emily's disease began mildly.

The things we do not understand

When we understand those things, I believe that we will have a real movement.

We will not survive if we only fight for people who are exactly like ourselves in degree of disease progression.

Here are examples. They are just examples (i.e. not discussion points). My point in this article is larger.


The following is a random sample of the consequences of failing to understand the above listed things at a visceral level.


If we do not understand those things, then we do not understand why it is a scandal that major sample banks include zero housebound or bedridden. Real scientists test hypotheses against relevant facts.

And we do not understand how counterproductive it is to tell mild sufferers they don't have the disease when we don't know. Doing so sends them to the Stockholmers for soothing indoctrination. Early-stage sufferers will learn the opposite of the truth about their own disease.


And we ignore those who are very severe. They are not online. "Out of sight, out of mind" is for plumbing and wires, not people.


And we do not understand why it is a scandal that a professional organization's primer includes exercise recommendations for severe sufferers, and claims that opportunistic infections are not a problem.2 "It works for me" is not how you evaluate a primer.

And we do not understand the need for nondenialist definitions. "I don't match it" is not how you reject a research definition.


And we do not understand why an amphetamine is not a sensible priority for drug research or approval.

And we do not understand how you have to be mild to even travel to a treadmill study, or how that could matter.


And we perpetuate pointless schisms on etiology theories. By Samuel's Law (any explanation must fit the facts) your explanation fails if it only fits your severity level. Almost all theories were never possible in the first place.

And we do not understand how urgently to advocate.

Explanation:

Selfish reason: you can progress to severe tomorrow.

Rational reason: the "I don't care about anybody else" attitude will fail to further the movement.

Stone soup reason: somebody else will do it? I have a bridge to sell you.

Practical reason: you can advocate much more. Leaving it up to people more severe than yourself is … tacky.

Enlightened reason: other people count.

Do we need a reason to do the right thing?

The things ACT-UP understood

ACT-UP understood that early-stage and late-stage have the same disease. We do not.

ACT-UP had massive demonstrations. We never will until we understand this.

ACT-UP won. We will not until we take action.


When a large enough proportion of our early-stage sufferers understand the nature of their own disease, we will have a real movement.

When we educate the teachable ones accurately and warmly welcome them, we enable that to happen.

How bad do things have to get?

How bad do things have to get before we become a movement?

Internment camps?

That isn't hyperbole. It is not a rhetorical question. I am literally asking you a sober question.


When will we strictly educate and warmly welcome teachable mild sufferers and make a real movement?


When will mild sufferers stop calling themselves severe?

When will they stop having floor-scrapingly deferential meetings with authorities who will without exception never cooperate even in the year 2200 unless forced?

When will they become activists? Proud ones. Informed ones. Enlightened ones. "Advocacy" is for wimps.

Here is what I believe

I believe that the lives of all sufferers (and a whole lot of people who are not yet sick) depend on what mild sufferers do.

I will explain more in future posts.

Conclusion

Until a critical proportion of mild sufferers understands viscerally that studying only mild sufferers kills mild sufferers, and understands viscerally the concept of doing the right thing, they will at best spend their time watching movies, bickering on forums, and clicking "like" on social networks instead of making advocacy — activism — the highest priority in their lives.

Without that, all of those early-stage sufferers will die before any meaningful treatment becomes widely available.


Millions will get sicker.

They haven't incorporated that into their beings yet.

So I ask you

So I ask you:

Why are we allowing mild sufferers to die?

Samuel

Footnotes:

1 More on this in various posts including Characterization and More you than you.

2 Caution: there are two unrelated and different documents with "primer" in the name. They also both have "international" someplace. The only primer-like document that I will ever link to at this time is the International Consensus Primer (pdf). It is based on the MEICC. Somebody told me it fails to include a good anesthesia protocol; I cannot check at this time. I can tell you for certain that the professional organization's primer will do serious harm.

4 comments :

  1. We allow sufferers to die because no one can deal with the facts.

    The CFS paradigm is its own worst enemy, as it happily censors facts about end stage NON HIV AIDS cases.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You're right. And there are no easy answers.

    Severe sufferers don't do much advocacy because they have to channel all of their energy toward keeping themselves alive.

    Milder sufferers may not do much advocacy because they're expected to do more for themselves, and if they advocate, they'll have to ask somebody else to get their groceries and cook their meals. They may not have anybody like that in their lives.

    Caregivers may be overwhelmed with caregiving.

    You're right about everything. It's just hard.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hi cinderkeys,

    Thanks for reading.

    I will post much more on this.

    I do NOT believe it is because we are all too sick.

    To the contrary, we have sufferers who travel overseas for pleasure. They do not take activist action.

    Some of them know every detail of every scientific conference and death-causing political action against us and moronic UK clown criminal withcraft-theory newspaper article. But they call themselves severe.

    And I am NOT saying only mild sufferers should act. Not at all.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Fair enough. I can't account for the people who travel overseas and don't engage in activism.

    ReplyDelete

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