The European ME Alliance
is a collaboration of ME organisations within Europe who have the common aim of
promoting biomedical research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (known as ME or
ME/CFS) and increasing awareness of this debilitating neurological illness.
The European ME Alliance (EMEA) aims to –
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
is defined by the World Health Organisation as a neurological illness (code
WHO-ICD-10-G93.3). The varying symptoms experienced by many severe ME sufferers
may include: -
post-exertional malaise and loss of muscle power with delayed and prolonged
recovery, general chronic weakness of limbs, neurological disturbances,
cognitive problems such as memory loss & concentration difficulties, problems
with balance and fine motor control, muscle pain, malaise, hypersensitivity,
sleep & temperature disturbance, cardiovascular symptoms, digestive
disturbances, visual problems, vocal/muscular limitations.
ME is a very serious
illness even in relatively mild cases. Research has found that ME-patients
experience loss of function that is devastating and comparable to AIDS and
late-stage cancer.
ME has a prevalence of
0.4% of the population with many of the sufferers being children. It is the
major cause for long term absence from school for children. In the UK ME is five
times more prevalent than HIV/AIDS.
25% of people diagnosed
with ME may be severely affected – house-bound, often bed-bound, left with
little help from the medical community, often made to struggle to obtain
benefits and left to an uncertain and debilitating future.
ME is estimated to cost European economies billions of Euros every year.
ME is a multi-system
illness and distinct sub groups have been identified and some treatments have
been shown to be effective. To establish more comprehensive treatments and cures
for these and other sub groups requires investment in biomedical research.
Yet no public funding of
biomedical research is currently taking place in Europe so biomedical research
projects are funded solely by the private grants to individual researchers and
from ME support groups and individuals.
With little funding of
biomedical research into ME within Europe the EMEA are hoping to attract more
support for research activities and hope to convince governments to recognize
the necessity for a European biomedical research strategy to cure this illness.
ME needs more awareness from the public, politicians and healthcare staff.
We invite other organisations across Europe to support our objectives to change
the perception of this illness and force change in government policies and
accept the urgent need for biomedical research into the illness in order to
establish treatments and cures for this devastating illness.
Member organisations of
EMEA have agreed the following principles –
-
Members of the European ME Alliance endorse the
principles of the 2003 Canadian Consensus Document for Diagnosis and Treatment
for ME/CFS.
-
Members of the European ME Alliance endorse the
principles of the 2006 paediatric definition from Dr Leonard Jason et al.
-
Members of the European ME Alliance promote the
fact that ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) is a neurological illness in the World Health Organisation's
International Classification of Diseases.
-
Members of the European ME Alliance understand the
necessity to use the composite term ME/CFS at the moment for ease of
reference/standardisation.
-
Members of the European ME Alliance support
biomedical research into establishing sub groups of ME/CFS which will lead to
treatments and cures for this illness.
-
The European ME Alliance has, as an objective, the
preparation and promotion of a common set of documentation, in all languages,
for Alliance use that is supplemented by local information.
The founding members of the European ME Alliance are –
Belgium |
ME/CFS Association (Nieuwrode,
Belgium) |
Denmark |
ME-NetDK |
Ireland |
Irish ME Trust |
Germany |
Fatigatio e.V. |
Norway |
Norges ME-forening |
Sweden |
Riksföreningen
för ME-patienter |
UK |
Invest
in ME |
More details will be available in the coming months on our web
site at
www.europeanmealliance.org or
www.euro-me.org.
Last Update:
27 October 2009 |
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