On Saturday June 2, the Third Taylor's Wish Race 2 Cure PH will take place in Tay's memory in Anaheim, California. The event is organized by Taylor Caffrey's family and friends in her memory, raising funds for PH research and parient support programs.
The Caffrey family also does incredible work in building awareness of PH (as you can tell from the donated billboards that started popping up maround Los Angeles a few weeks ago).
Recently, Steve and Lucas Van Wormer have been partnering with Tay's mom, Shari Caffrey in media efforts and this ABC7 news report is a spectacular result.
One of the exciting things about this news report, which also included Dr. Juan Alejos, is that ABC7 included a public service announcement (PSA) video that Steve and Lucas recently made using a Lantos grant from PHA. The station easily pulled it from YouTube.
We'll soon be adding Steve's video PSA's to our media page which already has his audio PSAs and to our media guide page. As soon as we do, I'll be blogging about a story that Dr. Mike McGoon told me last week. He used a free hour to get his local TV station to agree to air our new awareness PSAs.
Good luck to all the great folks who organize Taylor's Wish. I know it will be a great day!
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Friday, May 25, 2012
Research… a story, a call to action
This blog is about a shift that is dangerous – and
unnecessary – for our country. It offers a story and a call to action from the American Thoracic Society.
Since I was a boy – and that was a long, long time ago – the
greatness of this nation’s National Institutes of Health (NIH) was a given
fact. Over many decades, much of the
medical research funding that led to increases in knowledge and advancement
came out of NIH. Founded in 1887, they built a system that worked.
It is a system that is now being given to other nations.
On April 26, as a member of the American Thoracic Society’s
Research Advocacy Committee (RAC), I participated in visits to the offices of
ten Members of Congress.
Here’s the good news.
As we visited Senate and House offices representing Maryland, North
Carolina and Louisiana, virtually all said that they had received calls that
day about PHA’s Bill, the Tom Lantos Research and Education Act. (April 26 was also PHA’s National Call-in to
Congress Day…our members were effective, as always.)
Now the bad news.
A key talking point for our visits was asking Congress to
support NIH funding.
As we made our visits, a researcher who I spent the day with
put it best.
She pointed out to Congressional staff that NIH is the
world’s leader in groundbreaking biomedical research for the prevention,
treatment and cure of diseases. Yet, due to eroded funding, NIH is able to fund
about 10% of highly meritorious scientific research. That number used to be over 30%.
She went on to explain what that means in real terms…
“Young U.S. doctors are no longer coming into the field. When 10% of grants are funded and the competition is among the brightest minds in the world, even if a researcher gets their first five year grant, it’s not likely they will be able to get a second grant to allow them to stay in the field. Young researchers understand this. After I got my current grant and advertised to staff my project, all the applicants were from China and India, not one was from the U.S. They will take knowledge from here and go home and the U.S. will be poorer for it.”
Listening to her, I was reminded of an experience I had
several years ago, flying back from Chinese and Taiwanese PH association meetings. About an hour into the flight, I started
talking to the passenger next to me.
When he heard that I was from Maryland, he said, “I used to live there, in Bethesda.
I used to work at NIH”. When I
asked him what brought him back to Taiwan, he said, “Well, I’m a researcher in
oncology. The research money has dried
up in the U.S. Research money is flowing
in Asia”. That was in 2007. The situation is a lot worse today.
Well, that’s the story…here’s the American Thoracic
Society’s call to action…
ATS’s Research Advisory Committee recently wrote a paper titled, The Case for Increased Funding for Research in Pulmonary
and Critical Care.
The Abstract appears onthe ATS website ,
prior to print publication, opening with these words:
“The current economic and
political climate places future funding of the NIH and other federal biomedical
research programs in jeopardy. This Perspective seeks to arm the diverse
membership of the ATS with the information necessary to understand and
articulate the value of biomedical research in their respective communities.”
ATS has asked PHA and other organizations to help circulate the paper. So that you can have full access to it, we
have placed a copy on the PHA website. I encourage you to read, , The Case for Increased Funding for Research in Pulmonaryand Critical Care.
It is compelling. It is important. It is a call to action we need to heed before
it is too late.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
An appreciated award from NORD...
Last night, PHA was pleased to receive the National Organization for Rare Disorders’
Abbey S. Meyers Leadership Award for 2012.
Here is how NORD presented the reason for the award to the
500 rare disease organization leaders, Members of Congress and industry
supporters who attended their Partners in Progress dinner at Union Station in
Washington, DC (click on the text to enlarge and read)…
Monday, May 14, 2012
World PH Day…a first among many
As a community grows, it develops traditions and
opportunities.
The First World PH Day
– celebrated on May 5, 2012 – offered both of
those. As patient and medical leaders
from five continents gathered in Madrid, Spain for the Scientific Session and Celebration,
I couldn’t help but think of how far we’ve come in so few years.
The first patient with PH was diagnosed just over 120 years ago, in 1891, by Dr. Ernst von Romberg, a German physician and clinical
scientist.
Sixty years later – in 1951 – after identifying just over 30
cases in the U.S., Dr. David Dresdale gave the disease its name.
Ninety years later – in 1981 – the National Institutes of
Health began a five year registry which enrolled 187 patients across the U.S.,
providing the first clear picture of the disease.
In January of 1991, 100 years after Dr. Romberg made the
first identification of a PH case and forty years after Dr. Dresdale named it,
four women sat around a kitchen table in Florida. Three were patients, one was a caregiver and two were also medical
professionals (nurses). Their coming
together set in motion the beginning of a PH community and acceleration for
change. Their action led to the first PH
association in the world. Today, there
are 58 such national associations throughout the globe.
Five years after PHA was founded, the first disease-specific
treatment for PH was approved by the FDA.
Today, there are nine treatments – as many or more than all but two of
the 7,000 rare diseases identified in the U.S.
PH association networks are flourishing in Europe and Latin America. Asia and North America are active and the
South African PH association
is a beacon in Africa.
It was great to celebrate with Juan Fuertes and Irene
Delgado (who conceived of, organized, fundraised for and inspired the First
World PH Day for which we again thank the Spanish PH association, ANHP. It was an honor to be with leaders like
Noriko Murakami who built PHA Japan
Cecilia Martinez Ramirez who founded HAP Mexico,
Denneys Niemandt, who one by one, told the stories of the 25 patients diagnosed in South
Africa, Yvetta and Peter Makovnikova, developers of a Slovakian PH association,
Dr. Majdi Idrees, president of the Saudi Association for Pulmonary Hypertension SAPH, Enrique Carazo Minguez, president of the other Spanish association, FCHP, Gerry Fischer, founder of
PHA Austria and president
of PHA Europe and that network’s vice president Pisana Ferrari who also
leads the Italian association, AIPI. Many others were there including globally recognized PH physicians, such as Drs. Galie, Rubin, and Simmeneau.
There will be many future World PH Days but the traditions began with this one and I have no doubt the opportunities will continue to emerge. But, as always, we are driven by the
stories. Here’s one to close this
blog. It is a reminder for me why we do
what we do...
A woman came up to me at the World PH Day celebration and said, “I
have to thank you.” When I asked her
why, she said that she had been diagnosed before there was a Spanish
association and continued, “I came to the PHA website to learn about the
disease and how it affected the lives of others like me. Actually, I have to
thank you twice.” When I asked why
again, she said, “When I came to PHA's site I didn’t know how to read
English. The information was so
important to me that I forced myself to learn to read the language from the site.”
I regret that I have forgotten her name but I will never forget what she taught me about the importance of the work that we all do.
I regret that I have forgotten her name but I will never forget what she taught me about the importance of the work that we all do.
PH in China: From blue lips to great heart...
For the past year or so, the ISeek Cultural Center in China has been using film to tell PH patient stories. This weekend Yue, a Chinese high school student studying in Canada spoke about their latest production on one of PHA's list servs.
Yue shared the video to help build awareness of PH. Here it is...
Yue shared the video to help build awareness of PH. Here it is...
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