Margaret of Mar, 31st Countess of Mar

Margaret of Mar, 31st Countess of Mar, (born 19 September 1940) is a British elected hereditary peer in the House of Lords. She has suffered from ME/CFS since coming into contact with sheep dip in 1989 on her farm. Lady Mar founded Forward-ME to promote effective joint working by ME and CFS organisations to maximise impact on behalf of all people with ME and CFS in the UK.

Lady Mar is a patron of the ME Association, Tymes Trust and ME Research UK.and is co-chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis.

Illness
Lady Mar came into regular contact with OP sheep dip when dipping her sheep on her farm in the 1980s. She reports having had 'dipping flu' after each occasion of working with sheep dip - runny nose, tight chest and cough - although she did not take much notice of it at the time. It was on one of those occasions, in 1989, when she accidentally spilt some dip into her wellington boot. After several hours, she began to feel the ill effects of skin contact with the dip. Within three weeks, she had developed the first signs of ME/CFS.

The next year she spent housebound and largely bedbound, with symptoms including concentration problems, myalgia, weight loss, and poor focus in the eyes.

Open letters
The Countess of Mar contacted Dr Suzanne O'Sullivan about her book "It's all in your head - True Stories of Imaginary illness" in June 2015. She expressed dissatisfaction of the description of ME/CFS as a psychosomatic or conversion disorder in  the book and promotional media interviews about it.

On November 3, 2016, the Countess wrote to the BBC to complain about the coverage of the FITNET ME/CFS paediatric trial run by Esther Crawley. . She said the reporting was "was neither accurate nor impartial" and that information on the BBC website, news bulletins & news channel were misleading.

On Nov 21, 2012, The BBC replied to the Countess's letter stating that "We are aware that research about CFS has been controversial and we try to ensure that this is reflected in our coverage....I accept that the original headline for the article by James Gallagher which referred to people being ‘cured’ was incorrect. In fact it was published in error and was corrected very shortly after the original version was first posted....we decided to make reference to [the controversy] by including a clip of Jane Colby from the Tymes Trust."

Talks and interviews

 * 2010, House of Lords debate neurological disorders October 11
 * Speeches by Lady Mar - Forward-ME

Online presence

 * House of Lords Profile
 * Countess of Mar - TheyWorkForYou

Learn more

 * Wikipedia - Margaret of Mar, 31st Countess of Mar
 * All-Party Parliamentary Group on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis
 * Forward-ME