PRESS RELEASE – World ME Day, ANZMES launches new clinical “Key Red Flags” guide to help GPs recognise ME/CFS earlier and prevent avoidable harm

The Associated New Zealand Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Society (ANZMES) is marking World ME Day 2026 with a national call to action: Take ME Seriously. This year’s campaign focuses on improving early recognition of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) in primary care through a new, evidence‑based Key Red Flags for GPs resource.

Thousands of New Zealanders live with ME/CFS — a serious, multisystem neuroimmune disease that profoundly affects mobility, cognition, autonomic function, and quality of life. Yet many remain undiagnosed or misdiagnosed for years, leading to preventable deterioration.

ANZMES President Fiona Charlton says the new clinical tool is designed to meet GPs where they are: “Most people with ME/CFS present first — and often only — in primary care. Early recognition is the difference between stabilisation and long‑term disability. Our Key Red Flags guide gives GPs the practical, real‑world indicators they need to identify ME/CFS early, recognise deterioration, and prevent iatrogenic harm.”


A practical, GP‑friendly tool for early detection

The Key Red Flags for GPs document distils the latest international evidence into a concise, one‑page clinical guide. It highlights the most important “dashboard lights” that signal ME/CFS in mild to moderate presentations — the group most commonly seen in general practice.

The resource focuses on:

  • Post‑Exertional Malaise (PEM) — the cardinal symptom of ME/CFS and the strongest diagnostic indicator.
  • Boom–bust cycling and shrinking functional capacity.
  • Orthostatic intolerance (OI) and POTS‑like symptoms, often mistaken for anxiety.
  • Talk Test failure — a simple in‑consult indicator of exertional intolerance.
  • Cognitive overload and sensory hypersensitivity, frequently subtle but clinically significant.
  • Early functional decline, which is preventable with timely pacing and stabilisation.

The guide also outlines immediate GP actions, including pacing education, orthostatic vitals, low‑stimulus consultations, and avoiding harmful recommendations such as graded exercise or “pushing through.”


A national call for safer, evidence‑based care

ANZMES’ 2026 campaign builds on its ongoing advocacy for improved recognition, updated clinical pathways, and alignment with global best practice. Previous ANZMES statements have highlighted the consequences of outdated treatment protocols, under‑recognition, and lack of specialist services in New Zealand.

“New Zealanders with ME/CFS deserve care that reflects the science,” Charlton says. “This resource is a step toward ensuring every GP in Aotearoa can recognise ME/CFS early, respond safely, and prevent avoidable decline.”


About World ME Day

World ME Day is a global initiative held annually on 12 May to raise awareness of ME/CFS and promote evidence‑based understanding of the disease. This year’s theme, Take ME Seriously, calls on clinicians, policymakers, and the public to recognise ME/CFS as the serious biomedical condition it is.


Access the Key Red Flags resource

The Key Red Flags for GPs document and full World ME Day 2026 campaign materials are available at:
anzmes.org.nz/world-me-day/take-me-seriously-2026

Press Release – ANZMES Launches National “Take ME Seriously” Campaign to Transform ME/CFS Clinical Care in Aotearoa

Release Date: 5th May 2026

The Associated New Zealand Myalgic Encephalomyelitis Society (ANZMES) is officially marking World ME Day on 12 May 2026 with a national call to action under the global theme “Take ME Seriously”. This year’s campaign is focused on bridging the significant gap between scientific discovery and clinical practice by providing New Zealand’s healthcare professionals with the evidence-based tools they need to recognise and manage Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) safely. With the recent release of breakthrough findings from the world’s largest DNA study, DecodeME, the biomedical reality of this condition is undeniable, yet many New Zealanders continue to face outdated treatment narratives that can lead to permanent clinical harm.

Leading up to World ME Day, ANZMES will launch new clinical resources and have conversations designed to help General Practitioners identify early warning signs such as Post-Exertional Malaise (PEM) and orthostatic intolerance. These resources are part of a wider push to promote the World ME Alliance’s Medical Education Hub, a global library of peer-reviewed materials that align local primary care with international best practices. ANZMES President Fiona Charlton emphasises that for too long, ME/CFS has been misidentified as a psychological or deconditioning issue, whereas the current science confirms it as a multisystem hardware failure involving immune dysregulation and mitochondrial dysfunction.

The campaign also highlights the “Know M.E. Clinical Education Programme,” a CME/CPD-accredited training series for hospital teams, nurses, and allied health professionals across Aotearoa. By providing these accredited modules, ANZMES is helping clinicians understand the “Energy Envelope” and the fundamental necessity of pacing as a primary management strategy. Distinguished experts, including Dr. Ros Vallings and Professor Warren Tate, have contributed to this educational push, underscoring that when clinicians are trained to understand the biological markers of the disease, the healthcare system moves from a state of uncertainty to preventing avoidable functional decline.

For the thousands of New Zealanders still waiting for a legitimate diagnosis, the 2026 campaign offers a message of hope and a formalised pathway to support. ANZMES is encouraging the public and the medical community to share these “decoded” facts to spread the science and challenge long-standing misconceptions that have historically hindered patient care. 

We ask that you please support and follow our 2026 campaign on ANZMES Facebook. over the next week. Sharing our content helps spread our message further and reach our health practitioners across Aotearoa. 

Detailed clinical resources, diagnostic criteria, and localised referral pathways are now available on the ANZMES website to ensure that every healthcare provider in Aotearoa is equipped to take ME seriously: World ME Day 2026 – ANZMES 

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