Showing posts with label Carl Hicks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carl Hicks. Show all posts

Monday, December 31, 2012

As we begin 2013…an important new direction for PHA

Carl Hicks, Bette Perez, Lisa Beth Gansberg, Gina Parziale, Rino Aldrighetti
Almost exactly one year ago, I began an important new conversation with PHA’s Board of Trustees.

At that time, PHA was able to look back on significant and almost uninterrupted growth during the past dozen years.  Looking forward, however, we anticipated that, without changes, this growth could be at risk.
Let me start by explaining why growth is important in our disease state and the risks we face and then I will talk about our plans for the future.

PHA has always known that it is no less complex or expensive to solve the problems of a disease state like PH, with our 20,000 to 30,000 diagnosed patients in the U.S., than it is to solve the problems of a disease like diabetes (24,000,000 diagnosed in the U.S.) or arthritis (73,000,000).  In the face of that reality, we have built a system that has allowed us the funding to do what we need to do.  That system has been built upon our members and friends who give very generously, special events organized at the grass roots level, external givers like foundations and industry.
Industry giving has been significant and there is a reason for their strong support.  PH – which had no treatments before 1996 and only one (Flolan) until 2001 – has as many or more treatments today than all but two of the 7,000 rare diseases identified in the U.S. by the U.S. government.  Here is that list as of June 2011:
Leukemia…………….25
HIV/AIDS…………….24
PH/PAH………………..9
Hemophilia……….….9
Growth failure….….8


Having said that, industry giving functions parallel to their business cycle in a disease.  As their products mature and move toward generic availability, the good news is that pricing will go down…we are already seeing that with Revatio.  However, the other side of the coin is that we anticipate this segment of PHA’s funding will begin to recede. 
Even if industry funding was to hold steady or increase – and, with new products in the pipeline, that might well happen – PHA still needs to develop alternate funding.  We have always been driven to do all that needs to be done and never to be limited by the size of our patient population.  As we have grown, we have been asked to – and strive to – do more:

·       to coordinate, train and assist a support group network that will shortly include over 250 groups

·       to organize and provide essential online and face to face medical education for a medical community that is rapidly growing

·       to develop and assist patient and caregiver groups for segments of our community with specific needs and interests

·       to increase support for adult and pediatric PH research within our five research programs

·       to support the development of a system of standards that will result in defined and accredited PH Centers of Care to improve the quality of clinical treatment for patients

·       to rapidly expand our early diagnosis campaign, Sometimes It’s PH, toward our goal of reducing the time from onset of symptoms to point of diagnosis over the next five years

·       and so much more…to see, all you have to do is look at PHA’s three primary websites, www.PHassociation.org, www.PHAonlineuniv.org and www.SometimesItsPH.org. 
All this is exciting opportunity to make things better for our community…but it also requires significant resources. 

So, that’s why continuing growth is important and those are the risks we face.  Now let’s talk about how PHA is responding.
At PHA’s board meeting in early 2012, I talked to our board about the same issues I am writing about in this blog and we began a discussion to ensure our sustainability…an eight month process of search and discovery.  Our goal has been to find and build a structure that will keep PHA strong and independent in the coming years to do all the things we must do. Our timetable was to make a decision and establish our new structure for this goal by January 1, 2013.
As I post this blog on the last day of 2012, it was quite a trek but we have met that goal.
In the early months of 2012, board and staff began to investigate and discuss different options.  For various reasons, each was rejected as not being capable of fully meeting our needs.
Then, on July 17, we had a full day meeting with the leadership of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. 
Our history went back a long way with CFF.  A year or so after I began work with PHA as its first staff person, board member Jack Stibbs and I had a number of meetings with Bob Dresing, who was one of the founders and who had been CFF’s first CEO.  More recently, our Scientific Research Council had been working closely with Dr. Bruce Marshall, their VP of Clinical Affairs about their development of Centers of Excellence.
At our July meeting, we brought in 5 board members with business and medical background and 5 staff.  We went through a number of issues with their long-time CEO Bob Beall and COO, Rich Mattingly and a number of others. 
During follow-up discussions, it was clear that we had unanimous agreement that their Chapter structure fit both our mission and goals.
 We had a target.  In the end though, it’s always about people.  To maximize our chances of success, we now needed to staff that target…and staff it we did.
On October 1, Carl Hicks became the first member in PHA’s history to move from a board position to a staff position.  Following his resignation from the board, we hired Carl to fill a newly created position, Vice President for Field Operations…certainly not because he was a former board Chair but because – with his military and corporate leadership experience at the highest levels – Carl is clearly the right person for this job.
Our task is to create new funding streams to support the work described above and the work to come.  In the first year, the plan we developed calls for three such Chapter offices to be established and brought to significant profitability within the first 12 months.
Carl has been working rapidly since early October to build this new support element for our structure.  By November he had completed the process of city selection for our first three Chapters.  Once New York, Chicago and San Francisco had been chosen, over 100 resumes were collected and, following many phone screenings among the candidate pool, he began to travel to each of the cities.  In New York, he and Joanne Sperando Schmidt – a support group leader, event organizer and former board member – completed nine first round interviews in a day.  He did eight interviews the next day in Chicago with Liz Rossi – who had organized some of PHA’s earliest large events.  He repeated the process in the San Francisco area with participation by PHA board member Rita Orth.
By late November, Carl and I began second round interviews at the PHA office.  In early December, we had completed hiring for PHA’s first three Chapter Executive Directors:
·       New York: Gina Parziale has well over a decade of rapidly increasing responsibility among New York area non-profits, serving as the District Director of the Muscular Dystrophy Association and the Division Vice President of the American Liver Foundation (New York/New Jersey).

·       Chicago: Lisa Beth Gansberg has been developing fundraising events for over a decade and a half.  Her work has benefited organizations such as the Chicago Chapter of the Arthritis Foundation, the National Kidney Foundation of Illinois, the National Kidney Foundation of Illinois and the National ORT.

·       San Francisco: Bette Perez has been leading non-profits in the Bay area for over two decades with strong experience in special events and major giving.  These include St. Vincent DePaul Housing and United Way of Sonoma-Mendocino-Lake.  (Bette set a record after being hired, securing the first major gift through the new Chapter structure within an hour of accepting her position!)
On December 18, we began a three and a half day training for our three executive directors at PHA’s office in Silver Spring, Maryland. Besides learning about PH and PHA…
·       we analyzed their needs so that the national office is positioned to provide effective support

·       they connected with each other to form a strong team

·       they developed their budgets

·       funding goals were established

·       advertising was placed (and hiring has begun) for what will soon be three person field offices in each of the cities
We have hit our first two goals.  Our first field offices have been established with strong leadership.  Our national office is positioned to provide necessary support for the field structure’s success.  Now, in the new year, the field offices will begin to raise funds as a key component of the funding strategy that will allow PHA to continue to respond to our community’s needs.  Our third goal is to bring each of the Chapters to positive income flow by August.  Following that milestone, we will continue to expand the field structure annually
So, as we close one year and open another, I present this to you as a window to future opportunity for our community. 
As I wrote above, it is no less expensive to solve the issues of a rare disease than one with millions of patients.  We cannot be limited by our numbers.  We must always find ways to exceed them. If we do not fight for this community, if we do not work to defeat this disease, who will?
We have a plan.  We have a team,  We have a worthy and critical cause.
May 2013 be a year of new breakthroughs and realized opportunity.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Awareness Month: Voices from the PH Community (#3)...

Just a few weeks ago, Carl Hicks spent 36 hours in the air for an extended weekend trip to Seoul, Korea.

The new Korean PH association had invited him to help infuse the same spirit of volunteerism that they had seen in PHA into their own new organization.

As an important part of his presentation, Carl had asked Colleen Brunetti, co-founder of PHA's Generation Hope group, to speak on film on what her volunteer involvement means to her.

It is a wonderful statement that was well received in Korea and has value for anyone anywhere interested in fighting back against the disease that has intruded into their lives.  So before PHA places Colleen's video on our website, here it is as an awareness month preview...



This is number 3 in an Awareness Month series on the Empowered by Hope blog.

You can make a difference, too.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Carl Hicks, an advocacy hero

On Wednesday, June 6 Carl Hicks sat at a long table in front of the Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee and told his story and made his request.

A former Army Ranger, Lt. Col. Hicks (Ret.) spoke about his daughter, Meaghan, and her battle with PH.   He has done this many times before, several years ago visiting the offices of over 100 Members of Congress in a two day advocacy marathon.
This time, he was asking the Chair, Senator Inouye and Vice-chair Cochran and the Subcommittee members to once again add PH to the list of diseases impacting military families.  Such a listing will make PH researchers eligible for grant funding from the Department of Defense research fund.  Carl made his request as the Senators looked at him and pictures of his beloved Meaghan.
You can watch Carl’s testimony on the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee website  Drag the time bar beneath the video to just past 33:00 to see Carl
We thank Carl and all our advocacy heroes who are getting to know their own Members of Congress and educating them about PH.  One Member at a time, we can and are making a difference.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

still too often...

In the  last issue of Pathlight, our Board Chair, Carl Hicks, wrote about his visit with Sharon Wilson and her family. We got word yesterday of her passing.  We mourn with her family.  We mourn for her and for all the good people we continue to lose to this terrible disease.  They drive us forward fo the day when we can truly say, "no more".

Here is a reprint of Carl's article.

Those of you who have heard me speak have heard me sometimes refer to this journey we are on as the “Trail of Tears.” I am quick to point out that along this route all of us seem to experience both tears of sadness as well as tears of joy. Yesterday I spent some time with a remarkable family I met on the trail. Both kinds of tears flowed for better than an hour.


Sharon and David Wilson, of Bellevue, Wash., live in a modest home with their sons Michael and Matt. A typical all-American family on the surface, David is now retired. Sharon has given up a promising career and a life of service as a teacher just prior to attaining her lifelong goal of a principal’s position. What makes this couple different is that David, a non-smoker, is stricken with lung cancer, while Sharon is now completely bedridden with pulmonary hypertension. And, the day prior to my visit, Sharon had just written a check for $200,000 to PHA. Through her generous donation to PHA, Sharon has accomplished her dream of helping others within her own lifetime.


As we all visited in Sharon’s bedroom, I ached inside for what surrounded me. Then Sharon would smile a really pretty smile and tell me how much she had enjoyed her chosen work of teaching and mentoring the kids in her classes. She has been able to give something to her school, and we cried tears of happiness together. The unfairness of what had struck their family and the inevitable “Why me?” question led to more tears of sadness. We all had a chuckle when I had to ask Michael, the youngest of the two boys, his age after hearing him recount several years of service in the Navy. “He’s just a babyface” the rest of the family chimed in unison as if they’d answered that question dozens of times. I shed a few tears of happiness at the closeness of this family because I knew they would need it to help each other out. I did my very best to thank Sharon and her family on behalf of all of us for her selfless act of kindness with her magnificent gift. As I tried to explain how her dollars, designated for research, would someday help to alleviate the suffering for untold numbers of people of all ages stricken with this illness, we cried more tears of both joy for those she would help save and sadness for those she couldn’t.

Leaving, I tried to get a promise from her that she wouldn’t go anywhere prior to our celebrating her birthday on September 26. She smiled again, a beautiful smile of peace that suggested now, especially after the tremendously kind acts of the past few days, her work here was nearly done. The tears came again for me as I pondered that, hugged her goodbye and headed for home.


The “Sharon Wilson Pulmonary Hypertension Research Fund” has been constituted at PHA. Every penny of Sharon’s contribution will go to research for the cure.