Emma Shorter

Emma Shorter is a citizen of Scotland. She is an Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) patient and volunteer for MEAction Scotland.

Parliament’s Petitions Committee
Emma gave parliamentary evidence on June 7th, 2018 on ME/CFS, the need for funding biomedical research, and her own experience with the disease and those who were in charge of her care. She had concerns for children unable to manage school and their parents being reported to children's services as their children cannot get to school due to being ill. Emma testified that patients need timely managed care support. She spoke of NICE guidelines being given information on patient harms due to Graded exercise therapy (GET) and Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).

Graded exercise therapy
Emma was encouraged to participate in (GET) by her doctor who described himself as the most knowledgeable on the disease. She was told her symptoms were a manifestation of her emotions. The clinic she went to told her to increase her walking by 10% each week and to push through to get better. She was able to walk 4 minutes a day when she began therapy and ended needing a wheelchair. She went back to her doctor and physiologist in a wheelchair and was told "Congratulations, we're so happy we helped you recover." She spoke about the US Institute of Medicine report that coined the name for ME/CFS as Systemic Exertion Intolerance Disease (SEID).

Child protection services and funding
Emma gave testimony on the treatment of children. One-fifth of parents of ME/CFS children reported having protection referrals made against them. Healthcare practitioners do not understand how children can be so sick for so long and they begin blaming the parents. She was thankful for the £15,000 a year for three years and explained that world-class researchers in Scotland were eager to research this underfunded disease.

Diagnosis, disease management, and research
Emma spoke about a meeting of international experts in the United States for an agreement of best support and management of care to be published later this year. She spoke of the research by Dr. Mark VanNess on aerobic metabolism and heart rate monitoring.

NICE guidelines
NICE guidelines were consulting patient groups on patient harms in reference to GET/CBT.

Psychological support vs CBT
Psychological support is welcome but (CBT) for ME/CFS is designed to keep patients from believing they are experiencing symptoms.

Nursing support
Emma agreed that a best practice would be to have nursing support. Investment in nurses to decrease wait time for ME/CFS patients to see someone to stop deterioration and long-term improvement.

Learn more

 * Public Petitions Committee 07 June 2018 Full video of testimony uploaded by MEAction via YouTube.

Online presence

 * Twitter