Kate’s Christmas for Charity

Give a gift of hope this Christmas with a donation to Invest in ME Research

By Kate Chaplin

Thanks for taking the time to visit my JustGiving page.

This year instead of a present for Christmas I would love nothing more than a donation to “Invest In ME Research”.

Invest in ME (IiME) is a charity that is looking to create awareness and research treatments for ME/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, an illness often dismissed.
http://www.investinme.org

I have suffered from ME/CFS for many years, through ups and downs, never knowing how I will be from day to day.
The last 2 years have been my worst relapse since I was first ill, and life has stopped again.

But I live in hope of better understanding and awareness, diagnostic tests, treatment, and, of course, a cure.

So please, whatever you can afford, no matter how small, please make a donation today.

Much Love – Kate x

P.s. The photo was taken in better times.

Kate’s Christmas: www.justgiving.com/fundraising/kate-chaplin

Thank you for your support!

December Doings for ME!

December Awareness and Fundraising for Invest in ME Research

Help me celebrate Life by helping a good cause.
Jon Campling: justgiving.com/fundraising/walktall4me

For a summary of Jon Campling’s activties in support of Invest in ME Research throughout 2017 see our blog Campling Can.

Follow the daily adventures of IIMER Bear in the run up to Christmas through his advent calendar on Instagram or Twitter and on Facebook via Anna Mitchell admin of Invest in ME Research Group.

Order the charity’s Christmas Cards here:
http://www.investinme.org/shop.shtml#cc

Order Five Portions of on Etsy here: etsy.com/uk/shop/FivePortionsOf
Profits from each box are kindly donated to IiME Research.

I have a few things made up ready to post as not making anything at the moment due to health and eye problems. Please take a peek & feel free to share Thanks, Lynne. www.etsy.com/uk/shop/ME2UDezignz

If you’re doing any Christmas shopping online please check out our ways to Raise Funds for Free as well as our Shop tab above.

This year instead of a present for Christmas Kate Chaplin would love nothing more than a donation to “Invest In ME Research”.
Join in Kate’s Christmas on JustGiving: www.justgiving.com/fundraising/kate-chaplin

During the first week of December all proceeds of the sales of any or all of my books will be donated to Invest in ME Research.
Rosalynde Lemarchand: roslemarchand.blogspot.com.es/2017/11/why-we-need-to-keep-fighting.html

You can generate an extra donation to IiME Research when you buy anything on Amazon at no extra cost to you by using this referral link.

Becca Hams’ fundraising page in honour of the late Lynn Gilderdale’s 40th birthday remains open for donations until 20th December 2017. Lynn sadly took her own life on 4th December 2008 ending 17 years of suffering from very severe ME. https://mydonate.bt.com/fundraisers/lynngilderdale40

Please contact us or send us a message on Facebook or Twitter if you’d like us to highlight your awareness or fundraising for the charity Invest in ME Research.

Best Wishes for December everyone.

Thank you for your support!

Walk Tall 4 ME

Amazing actor and advocate Jon Campling has set up a new fundraising page for Invest in ME Research: justgiving.com/fundraising/walktall4me

Support Jon Campling’s Walk Tall 4 ME: www.justgiving.com/fundraising/walktall4me

Catch up on Jon’s fantastic fundraising throughout 2017 in our blog
Campling Can.

Thank you for your support!

Rituximab Trial Status November 2017

What had looked to be a promising line of research that could lead to an effective treatment for a subgroup of patients defined by the Canadian Criteria and major understanding of the pathology of this disease has proven to be inconclusive. IiME Research – http://www.investinme.org/IIMER-Newslet-1711-03.shtml

Surprising news from Norway today, but the ground-breaking work continues in UK thanks to all involved and everyone supporting Invest in ME Research, so please don’t be too disappointed, as the charity explains in the following statement published today and reposted below.

Professor Olav Mella recently publicly released early details from the Phase III multi-centre double-blinded placebo-controlled Rituximab Clinical Trial which has been ongoing in Norway for the past year.

Invest in ME Research have been informed by Dr Oystein Fluge of this.

Invest in ME Research have issued this preliminary statement (below).

The Haukeland team will be presenting at the IIMEC13 13th International ME Conference in London on 1st June 2018.

Invest in ME Research Initial Statement
on Norwegian Phase III Rituximab Clinical Trial

November 21, 2017

The statement from Haukeland University, Bergen from Professor Mella is a major disappointment for people with ME and their families.

What had looked to be a promising line of research that could lead to an effective treatment for a subgroup of patients defined by the Canadian Criteria and major understanding of the pathology of this disease has proven to be inconclusive.

Naturally, at the charity, everyone is disappointed. We are disappointed for all the ME patients and carers and families and friends.

We are especially disappointed for all of our supporters and all who have made such generous and tireless efforts to raise funds and awareness of our campaign.

We are very disappointed also for the Haukeland research team – a wonderful team who have brought hope to all patients – and, importantly, brought new insight into this disease and new interest from other areas.

However, we have found, throughout 12 years of trying to change the way that ME is perceived, researched and treated that it is never easy.

It would be easy to give up, to resign oneself to nothing changing, to accept the status quo.

But we think differently.

At the 2017 Colloquium/Conference we invited Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm to present negative results. Because it is important to use negative results for positive effects. Negative results are data and the Norwegian rituximab trial has generated a lot of data that needs to be looked at very carefully.

When we first engaged Professor Jonathan Edwards into research into ME one of the earliest comments he made was that he was pleased to note that our conference did contain negative results.

We see the positives in this research which has been performed by researchers of the utmost integrity who have not made headlines for the sake of it but have thoroughly conducted outstanding research, and still retained a humility that is to their credit and that of their colleagues and team.

We have an excellent research team in Norway which has served the ME patient community and their families with honesty, integrity, professionalism, detemination and an empathy which had never been seen before in this field.

We have established good working relationships between the Norwegian researchers and the UK Centre with input from UCL and UEA/Quadram Institute.

We have data now – more than before.

We have research which IiMER has established and a foundation for the Centre of Excellence for ME.

We have international collaboration in research into ME that will continue.

And we have new plans – already in the making.

The researchers from Haukeland will give more detail on their results and publish a paper or two which will benefit all studying ME.

For us we have invited the Haukeland team to Norwich to discuss the way forward.

We remain positive. Another setback, another day.

We have already been in discussion with our advisors and with the Norwegian team and we will meet to clarify the best way forward in the near future with our major funder and researchers.

We still have much good research being funded and being planned and feel our stategy is, and will pay off and lead to most rapid route to finding cause(s) of ME and effective treatments.

In another age, and in another struggle which has some parallels to that which is forced upon people with ME, these words strike a chord –

“ We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope. ”

– Dr Martin Luther King

Source: http://www.investinme.org/IIMER-Newslet-1711-03.shtml

We are sorry to share disappointing news but encouraged that this presents the next step to achieving tests for differential diagnosis and effective treatment options for people with ME.

The charity’s B-cell/UK Rituximab Trial microsite is now here: http://www.investinme.org/ukrtbcell-ce-index.shtml

Thank you for your support!

Make ME crafts


If your looking for that extra special present for someone much loved this Christmas, then look no further than Make ME crafts. Including beautiful jewellery, stunning cards, unusual bookmarks and even hanging octopuses there is something for everyone at Make ME crafts!

What’s more you’ll also be raising much needed funds for IiMER as a proportion of every item sold goes towards the charity. Many of the items are made by ME sufferers themselves or else crafty sympathisers. So shop until you drop knowing it’s for a good cause!


If your interested in helping you can register as a seller or contact them for more information on how to help. It doesn’t matter if your interested in donating craft supplies, becoming a regular trader, selling a one off item or anything else. It all helps. Our departments are slightly bare ATM so we welcome any support with open arms!


“At ‘Make ME’ we aim to focus on the little things that people with this condition can accomplish, bit by bit, instead of the bigger things we can’t; to shift attention to the positive ways we can still make a difference.

Being ill doesn’t mean we have to stop being creative.Even if we’re stuck at home, or in bed, we can still contribute. Using the power of the internet and keeping our projects flexible enough to manage around our health, we can get our lovingly created crafts out there, raising awareness and fighting for real and effective M.E. treatments.



Crafts made by sufferers are listed at their own pace, as they complete them, with many sellers working on projects as and when they’re able. There is absolutely no rush – no pressure. There are no demands or time-constraints.



It’s not about how fast you can do something, it’s about how well you can do something. We may be ill but we haven’t lost our talent, our passion or our creativity. We just can’t manage things on the same scale as healthy people. We might not be able to keep up with the break-neck pace of the world outside, but that doesn’t mean we can’t do something constructive; something worthwhile, bit by bit. To borrow a phrase from Tesco “Every little helps”. Make ME crafts 





Visit their website www.makemecrafts.com