PRESS RELEASE & CASE STUDY: Tackling Stigma With Information Event On M.E. And Fibromyalgia

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Tina Calder

unread,
May 19, 2019, 12:42:01 PM5/19/19
to
Hi there

Please see below press release for an event happening tomorrow (MONDAY MAY 20) by the charity Hope for ME & Fibro Northern Ireland.

Whilst I realise it may be too late for printed publications tomorrow I would be very grateful if you could support the charity by carrying the press release and/or case study (both below) online and on social.

We can also make representatives from the charity available for interview should you require.

Stock images attached have been purchased on standard licence by Excalibur Press on behalf of the charity.

If you need anything else please don't hesitate to contact me.

Thanks

Tina :) 


PRESS RELEASE


Tackling Stigma With Information Event On M.E. And Fibromyalgia

HOPE for ME and Fibro Northern Ireland will host an event (Monday, May 20) to bust the myths over Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (M.E.) and the misinformation on Fibromyalgia at the Lagan Valley Conference Centre, Lisburn.
As well as having a range of information leaflets and booklets available, volunteers on hand to talk to attendees and an exhibition by the charity there will be a session called ‘Stigma & M.E. and Fibro Is Real’ presented by campaigner Joan McParland.
M.E. and Fibromyalgia are much misunderstood illnesses which are often misdiagnosed or diagnosed as each other, some patients receive a diagnosis of both conditions.
According to the charity, the medical profession has struggled to help patients with limited research to fall back on leading to frustration for doctors and patients alike.
Joan recognised these issues through her own illness and quest for a cure. Often feeling like she was banging her head against a brick wall Joan put her practical minded and determined spirit to work and decided to go straight to the doctors and to try to help them to help the patients.
“This is an information and awareness event for patients and family members to learn more about their illness and what the charity is doing to educate medical students and the medical professional,” said Joan.
“There is no specialist training in medical schools for M.E. or CFS and fibromyalgia is a speciality under rheumatology.
“This will offer hope where there is none basically and will provide the best self-management advice."
Recently Joan was honoured at the weekend as ‘Breakthrough Leader’ by NICON, the Northern Ireland Confederation for Health and Social Care.
May is International M.E. and Fibromyalgia awareness month, and Joan’s award was in recognition of her efforts to help the estimated 7,000 M.E. sufferers in Northern Ireland and a further 24,000 with Fibromyalgia. She is Founder and voluntary coordinator, of the charity HOPE for ME and Fibro Northern Ireland and is also a long-term sufferer of M.E. herself.
Joan added: "HOPE for ME and Fibro NI will also exhibit at the event, and we’ll have self-help booklets for patients plus booklets they can give to their doctors to help with their search for answers."

Local support organisation HOPE for ME and Fibro Northern Ireland is running a free event on Monday May 20 to help increase awareness about the conditions, with the aim of breaking the stigma surrounding the invisible but painful symptoms of fibromyalgia and M.E.

‘Stigma and ME & Fibromyalgia is Real’ is a free awareness and information seminar being held on Monday, 20th May in the Lagan Valley Conference Centre, Lisburn, for 2pm to 4pm.  Attendees can register on arrival.

For more information go to www.facebook.com/Hope4MEFibro


CASE STUDY - Karen Calder, 32


“Daily Tasks Are A Struggle For Me” Reveals Woman Diagnosed With Fibromyalgia


Karen Calder (32), originally from Belfast but now living in Kilkeel, started getting pains in her neck at 19 years of age. Over time, this progressed into prolonged periods of generalised pain all over her body. Finally, after many years of attending her GP and asking for referrals to specialists, Karen was diagnosed with mild joint hypermobility and fibromyalgia in 2017.

While a diagnosis is a positive step in the treatment process, there is no known cure for fibromyalgia, and the medical profession are still unsure as to how it develops in the first place. This means around 24,000 individuals in Northern Ireland, including Karen, live with the invisible but very painful condition fibromyalgia and another 7,000 with M.E (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) that directly impacts on their ability to live a normal and independent lifestyle.

“For someone who doesn’t have fibromyalgia – imagine having a bruise and continuously pressing it – it hurts. Imagine having that bruise covering your entire body. You can’t walk far without pain in your legs, you can’t brush your hair without pain in your scalp. You can’t get anyone to listen to you when you try to explain your symptoms, so it’s like yelling at the top of your lungs with no sound coming out. It’s incredibly frustrating” explained Karen.

Receiving a diagnosis of fibromyalgia is often and long and complicated process, with many individuals having more than one condition affecting them. Karen received her diagnosis in 2017 after a long process of trying to identify what was causing her pain.

She said: “Fibromyalgia makes many simple, daily tasks a struggle for me – I can’t clean my house or change my bed, and I struggle to have a shower or wash my hair on my own. I worked from the age of 16 but when the symptoms of my condition worsened, I became unemployed and haven’t been able to work since. I am currently trying to do a degree in health and social care.

“I had been getting pains in my neck for around ten years, and every doctor I went to said it was stress or tension. When the pains began to spread to other areas, friends thought it sounded like fibromyalgia. It was a very difficult time; I was in constant pain, but it felt like no one understood or believed just how bad it was. I fought with my doctor for about six months for a referral and finally got to see a rheumatologist. I was diagnosed with mild joint hyper mobility and fibromyalgia, and I had an MRI that showed wear and tear in my back and neck. I finally had proof that the pain I had been having for ten years or more wasn’t from stress.

“I had also been to numerous doctors because I had been having palpitations and I was told many times that it was anxiety. One night in 2014, the palpitations were so bad that I couldn’t move, so I phoned an ambulance. I was taken to hospital and kept in for five days before being diagnosed with supra ventricular tachycardia (SVT). In addition to fibromyalgia, I had been living with an undiagnosed heart condition.

“In 2015, I had an ablation and was told it was fixed, but it came back, so I had to have another ablation in 2016. During the operation the surgeon discovered that I had an accessory pathway. The SVT was fixed but now I need to take a heart tablet for the accessory pathway and a side effect of that is breathlessness.”

Fibromyalgia is often misdiagnosed as anxiety or depression and just like living with all other chronic, life changing illnesses patients can suffer secondary depression or anxiety as a result.  

Due to the impact the condition has on an individual’s ability to live a normal life – because of constant physical pains, lethargy, and fatigue - individuals do often suffer from mental health conditions in addition to fibromyalgia. This could be in part due to the long average length of time it takes to receive a diagnosis, the lack of treatment options available to help manage the condition, and the sense of isolation that individuals feel due to a lack of awareness and support.

“Fibromyalgia has changed my life – I struggle to lead a ‘normal’ life” said Karen, adding: “My relationships with family and friends have been affected, especially my relationship with my two young nephews who don’t understand why I can’t play with them and why I’m not a fun aunt anymore. I need help to do daily tasks at home, but because I can’t get a referral from my GP for a social worker, I’m not eligible for home help. I was told by a doctor that I cannot attend pain management classes because of my anxiety. He said that if I take a panic attack in the class it will disrupt the others and it wouldn’t be fair on them – but what about me?

“The medical profession absolutely doesn’t know enough about fibromyalgia, and it feels like a lot of them just don’t want to. My doctor said he read a book on living with pain and suggested I buy it. Another doctor in the same practice just prescribed me co-codamol, which doesn’t even work as pain relief for fibro.”


Local support organisation HOPE for ME and Fibro Northern Ireland is running a free event on Monday May 20 to help increase awareness about the conditions, with the aim of breaking the stigma surrounding the invisible but painful symptoms of fibromyalgia and M.E.

‘Stigma and ME & Fibromyalgia is Real’ is a free awareness and information seminar being held on Monday, 20th May in the Lagan Valley Conference Centre, Lisburn, for 2pm to 4pm.  Attendees can register on arrival.

For more information go to www.facebook.com/Hope4MEFibro

--

-- 
Tina Calder
Publicist / Content Creator / Journalist

07982628911 | ti...@excaliburpress.co.uk
Office 7, Cathedral Buildings, 
64 Donegall Street Belfast, BT1 2GT

Excalibur Press
News | Publishing | Publicity
EXCALIBUR PRESS - @ExcaliburPress | Facebook



CASE STUDY - Karen Calder, 32.docx
PRESS RELEASE Tackling Stigma With Information Event On M.E. And Fibromyalgia .docx
AdobeStock_212912750.jpeg
Karen Calder profile.jpg
Karen Calder 1.jpg
graphic for event.png
Karen Calder 2 - before fibro.jpg
graphic for event 2.png
AdobeStock_127379766.jpg
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages