| 
 
Invest in ME 
  LETTER to the 
 
UK SECRETARY of STATE for 
HEALTH 
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Blood Donations 
Recently Mrs Ann 
Keen, secretary of state for Health, commented that people with Myalgic 
Encephalomyelitis were not able to donate blood. Invest in ME have written the 
following letter to the Secretary of State for Health, Mr Andy Burnham. 
Rt 
Hon Andy Burnham MP 
Secretary of State for Health 
Department of Health 
Richmond House 
79 Whitehall 
London SW1A 2NS 
cc: Mrs Ann Keen MP 
14th March 2010 
Dear Mr. 
Burnham, 
Recently Mrs Ann Keen (in her capacity as Under-Secretary of 
State for Health) made the following comments in relation to Myalgic 
Encephalomyelitis and blood donations – 
"People with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), also known as 
chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), are not able to donate blood until they have 
fully recovered. 
The reasons for this are: first, blood donors need to be in good 
health, and people with ME/CFS often experience a range of symptoms which could 
be made worse by donating blood; and second, as the causes of ME/CFS are not 
currently fully understood, people with the condition are deferred from donating 
blood as a precautionary measure to protect the safety of the blood supply for 
patients.” 
Mrs Keen's comments are, we assume, representative of the 
government and your department. 
Firstly it is good that your government recognises that people 
with ME are in poor health. This implies that all people with ME are therefore 
in need of proper healthcare provision which treats the disease properly. 
Secondly it is good that you and your government recognise, by 
the implication from your statement, that blood supplies may be compromised by 
accepting people with ME as donors due to the organic nature of this disease. 
Thirdly it follows that an embargo on people with ME donating 
blood would mean that there is an infectious agent at work which could be passed 
on via blood. 
There follows several questions which lead on from this. 
It seems to be crucial to use the most stringent diagnostic 
criteria available for diagnosing ME (which even NICE acknowledge as being the 
Canadian Consensus Criteria). Yet your department, NICE and the MRC do not 
standardise on this internationally accepted standard for diagnosis of ME. 
When you state that people with ME are not able to donate blood 
are you employing the NICE guidelines for defining patients as having ME? If so 
then why does NICE proscribe serological testing unless there is an indicative 
history of infection?  If no initial indication of infection is present then no 
further blood tests are performed and a patient may receive a diagnosis of ME 
based on ongoing fatigue and one other symptom such as sleep disturbance. Why 
then would those patients be excluded from donating blood? 
As your government officially accepts ME as a neurological 
illness, as described by the World Health Organisation ICD-10 G93.3 code, and as 
the issue of blood contamination from an infectious agent demands the utmost 
care and attention, is it not of absolute necessity for your government to 
demand that a consistent set of up-to-date diagnostic criteria are used as 
standard by all organisations? 
Your department often states that the Medical Research Council is 
an independent body. Yet as it is apparent that the MRC only funds psychiatric 
studies which presume that ME is a behavioural illness why does your department 
refuse to comment on the MRC’s usage of the Oxford criteria for research into ME 
which expressly excludes people with a neurological illness? 
Why does your department not criticise the MRC for funding purely 
psychiatric research into ME if you fully recognise that ME is a disease of 
organic and infectious nature? Since when did a psychiatric illness prevent 
blood donations? Does this not clearly show the MRC policy of research into ME 
for the last generation to be completely flawed and a waste of precious funding 
and patients' lives? 
 
When you state that people with ME are not able to donate until fully recovered 
please can you define what “fully recovered” means?   
Could 
you also provide a description of how a person with ME is defined as no longer 
having ME?  
What biomedical tests are available to determine that a person with ME is “fully 
recovered”?  
Could you inform of how and when clinicians perform such tests in order to 
ensure that a person is "fully recovered" from ME? 
Bearing in mind the seriousness of a possible contamination of blood supplies 
from people with ME please could you indicate what measures are in place to 
ensure that doctors do enforce testing to ensure that people with ME are "fully 
recovered" and will not therefore donate blood? 
If such a test exists then presumably people with ME who are not 
recovered are entitled to appropriate benefits due to incapacity and/or 
disability? 
As relapses are common with people with ME please could you 
explain if there is any minimum period which a person with ME needs to be 
“recovered” to be able to donate blood? 
Could you also provide information which your government has on 
the number of people with ME in this country, the proportion of patients who 
have had ME for longer than five years and how many people with ME have “fully 
recovered”? 
With regard to your statement that “the causes of ME/CFS are not 
currently fully understood” is it not inherent on the Chief Medical officer of 
the UK to attend the 5th Invest in ME International ME/CFS 
Conference 2010 on 24th May in Westminster, as guest of Invest in 
ME? 
As the foremost experts on ME in the world are presenting at the 
conference, along with the Whittemore-Peterson Institute – who have recently 
been involved in the discovery of the XMRV retro-virus which has possibly huge 
considerations for the blood supply of this country – would it not be sensible 
for anyone who is involved in healthcare and particularly in the treatment of 
people with ME to attend this event? 
Should not the government of this country also be sending a 
representative to the conference given that contamination of the blood supply by 
people with ME may be occurring and that education about the disease needs to be 
a pre-requisite for anyone involved in healthcare provision for people with ME? 
We would request that you provide a full and complete answer 
to every single one of the questions which we have asked in this letter and we 
look forward to your reply, 
Yours Sincerely, 
The Chairman and Trustees of Invest in ME 
Invest in ME  
Registered UK Charity Nr. 1114035 
PO BOX 561, Eastleigh SO50 0GQ 
Support ME 
Awareness - Invest in ME   
www.investinme.org 
   |