Showing posts with label Hayes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hayes. Show all posts

Monday, July 23, 2012

From a kitchen table to around the world...

Last year, Mike McGoon, our former board and Scientific Leadership Council chair and a cardiologist specializing in PH at the Mayo Clinic made a good point.
"PHA has so many good videos but none of them tell our story.  Wouldn't that be valuable?"
There was no question he was right.  The only question was when to do it.

That answer took less than two minutes.  Our Tenth International PH Conference was coming up the following June and that was our clear target.

We gave our friends at Glenn and Glenn our goals and they completed the project in time for the opening of Conferernce 2012.

At 1:00pm on Friday June 22nd in the Renaissance Hotel in Orlando, the ballroom filled with over 1,500 PH patients, caregivers, medical professionals and friends from 27 nations, the lights came down and we premiered our new history video: From a kitchen table to around the world.  As it ended, the spotlight came down to our three surviving founders (Dorothy Olson, Pat Paton and Judy Simpson, with an empty seat for Teresa Knazik), seated at the same kitchen table around which they founded PHA on January 12, 1991.  The video of Judy Simpson's speech will be posted in the next couple of months... along with much of the other content from Conference 2012 on PHA Classroom (for patients & caregivers) and PHA Online University (for medical professionals).

For now, though, I hope you enjoy From a kitchen table to around the world...



There's lot's more PHA history available for you, including Gail Boyer Hayes' outstanding 116 page early history.


Wednesday, July 13, 2011

The story of a book...

July 25 will be an important day for PHA.  We will be publishing the new fourth edition of the Patients' Survival Guide.  Watching the work of our volunteer writers and artists, the medical reviewers, led by Dr. Ron Oudiz, and PHA staff, led by Patti Lalley and Amanda Butts, I've been awed by the work that has gone into a major revision and addition to this 300 page patient and family treasure.

In considering about how to celebrate this accomplishment, I can think of no better way than turning to the words of the book's creator (and author of it's first three editions) - Gail Boyer Hayes - who also wrote PHA's history from its founding through 2000 (and, in the case of the Survival Guide, a little bit beyond).

Gail continues to write - novels now - and we thank her for what she began and, as you can see,others jumped in to make possible.  She is another example of the difference a single person, willing to act, can make.

Today, PHA's Survival Guide, has been translated by teams of medical professionals and others from English into Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Spanish, Farsi and other languages.

We hope you enjoy the new fourth edition!

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FIRST PATIENT’S SURVIVAL GUIDE  PUBLISHED
Pulmonary Hypertension: A Patient’s Survival Guide

The Internet age was just dawning and most PH patients still did not have access to it. Even those who did lacked the sort of in-depth, accurate information they needed to cope with their illness and make intelligent decisions about which treatment options to discuss with their doctors. Both PH and its treatments were exceedingly complex. It is quite impossible for a patient with such an illness to remember everything a doctor tells him or her during an office visit, and equally impossible for a doctor to be comprehensive in the time allotted.

PHA decided, therefore, that patients needed a comprehensive reference book they could turn to for reassurance and for guidance.

PPH patient and writer/editor Gail Boyer Hayes (Seattle, WA) wrote the 123-page first edition of


Gail Boyer Hayes
 Pulmonary Hypertension: A Patient’s Survival Guide, which PHA published in 1998. Before she was diagnosed with PPH at the age of 40, Gail had been working as a lawyer in California, Colorado, and Washington, DC. And before that, she had been a book reviewer, magazine and newspaper reporter, short-story writer, and television talk show hostess. For the six years following her decision to write the Survival Guide, the Guide and its updates consumed nearly all of her free time.

The medical consultant was the distinguished Dr. Bruce Brundage. Andrea Rich (the wife of Dr. Stuart Rich) did the medical illustrations. Other PH patients, doctors, nurses, and family members reviewed the book prior to publication to make sure it answered the right questions and explained things in language a layperson could understand.

Chapters included: What is PH?; So How Do I Know It’s Really PH?; What Causes PH?; Treating PH; Tell Me Doc, How Long Do I Have?; Children and PH; Living with PH, and Tedious Paperwork and Legal Matters. Cost of the 123-page Guide to PHA members was $10.00.

Gail was concerned that the Guide not be slanted to curry the favor of any commercial interest. Therefore, she did not turn over the copyright to PHA until she was assured of this. (It turned out not to be an issue; PHA also wanted a Guide that patients could trust.)

The Patient’s Survival Guide was an immediate hit and flew out the door. Olsten provided PHA with $1,500 to include a copy in the new patient packets. Many doctors bought multiple copies to give out to their patients.


Barbara Smith

PH patient Barbara Smith and her husband Vern, residents of Odessa, Florida, who had built up a chain of plumbing, cable, air conditioning, and electric businesses, mailed the Survival Guides and paid for postage out of their own pocket. Barbara was already familiar with PPH before she was diagnosed in 1995, because both her sister Rachel, and her daughter Angela, had died of the disease. When Angela died, she was pregnant with her third child. After Barbara became too ill to handle the mailings herself, the Smiths continued to pay for them. For at least 5 years they also mailed out membership packets, new patient packets, PH pins and cards, and other materials, and paid the postage on them.

Few patients realized the generosity that made their low-cost orders possible. Barbara once said, “I couldn’t figure out why I was still alive after losing my daughter and my sister. The only reason I can think of is to help other people.” Barbara survived until October 2005.