National Institutes of Health Speaking at #BRMEC9 and #IIMEC14

International Research into ME

BRMEC9

Top researchers from around the world are participating in the 9th International Biomedical Research into ME Colloquium in London in May.

We are enormously pleased to announce that the Dr Vicky Whittemore from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is again presenting at the International Biomedical Research into ME Colloquium and the International ME Conference events

This will be the fourth year running that the NIH will be attending the Colloquium and Conference. .
NIH

Dr Whittemore opened the 11th International ME Conference in 2016 , the 12th International ME Conference in 2017 , the 6th Biomedical Research Colloquium (#BRMEC6). and the 7th Biomedical Research Colloquium (#BRMEC7) the 8th Biomedical Research Colloquium (#BRMEC8)

As a charity that is funding and facilitating a strategy of high-quality biomedical research into ME we continue to do all we can to assist in facilitating good and sensible research which will build on our other strategic goal of international collaboration in biomedical research.

So we are very pleased that Dr. Whittemore has again accepted our invitation to be present at these important events.

Dr. Whittemore is a Program Director in the Synapses, Channels and Neural Circuits Cluster. Her interest is in understanding the underlying mechanisms of the epilepsies including the study of genetic and animal models of the epilepsies.

Dr Whittemore is the NIH representative to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Advisory Committee.

The NIH has been considering additional ways to support ME/CFS research in the extramural research community. NIH The basis of the new NIH initiative was "that manifestations of the disorder cut across the science interests of multiple NIH institutes and centers, so a trans-NIH working group was needed to assist that plan." Along with NINDS Director Walter J. Koroshetz, M.D., Dr Whittemore chaired the Working Group.

One goal of the group was to explore how new technologies might shed light on what causes ME/CFS.

The Working Group included representation from 23 NIH institutes, centers and offices.

The NIH has awarded four grants to establish a coordinated scientific research effort on ME (click here).


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