Thursday, September 25, 2014

Proudford Foundation-Rockin the Red for Sickle Cell Awareness

The Proudford Foundation also hosted their 9th Annual Fundraiser 'Rockin the Red' in Baltimore, MD on September 18th and is another organization supporting Sickle Cell Awareness in the tri-state area.
William E. Proudford was a devoted family man, colleague, and friend who led by example, shared his joy, but never his sorrows; did not raise his voice above a whisper, and yet spoke with conviction. His calm nature and strong character brought out the best in every person he encountered. He had a love for learning all of his life and set an example of consistently searching for opportunities to enhance his personal development. While in the Air Force, he obtained his GED, became fluent in German and even took a course in Russian. After completing 24 years of service in the Air Force, he excelled at Delaware State College, graduating summa cum laude and earning membership in the top honor societies. An avid reader and fast learner, he went on to earn a Master's degree and to learn new skills throughout his life. Despite a number of physical challenges, including sickle cell disease, progressive and profound hearing loss, diabetes and kidney failure, he always maintained the quiet, unassuming and steady manner that made him the bedrock of his family.

Our Vision A World Without Sickle Cell Disease

Our Mission To support sickle cell awareness, education, state-of-the-art treatment and research, and to bring hope to families affected by this devastating disease

To learn more about the Proudford Foundation or make a Donation, go to www.wepsicklecell.org

Hear from two Sickle Cell Warriors- Dr. Dejoie and Dr. Carlton Haywood

by Newsworks- Author, Jeanette Woods Sickle Cell Disease still persists 100 years after discovery
A look at sickle Cell Disease and why there aren't more promising options for treatment. Eight year old Nadir Tinsley is getting restless. He's hooked up to a pint of red blood at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, pushing his IV pole down the hall. He wants to go play Wii with a friend in the activities room. Nadir's mom, Heather Hodges, gives up on trying to make him stay put so the little boy happily wheels his way to the game. "Nadir's a ball of energy," says Hodges. "But usually when its getting time for his transfusion, he's not so energetic. But after he gets the blood, ohh it's wonderful! He's so ---extra!" Nadir has sickle cell disease. The active eight year old gets blood transfusions every three weeks to help him avoid strokes as part of his treatment for the disease. Sickle cell disease targets red blood cells changing their shape and affecting their ability to carry oxygen and pass through blood vessels. The cells become stiff and sticky, clogging vessels or breaking up during circulation. One common, debilitating symptom is pain – it can be severe and incapacitating sending patients to the ER, and it can persist as constant, chronic pain for years. Patients suffer from anemia, organ damage and failure, stroke and a host of other complications that can lead to an early death. Sickle cell disease is genetic. It affects about 100,000 people in the United States, mostly people of African descent but also other ethnicities. It is considered an "orphan disease", defined as a disease that affects fewer than 200,000 individuals. Even though it is categorized as a rare disease, it's one of the most common genetic disorders in the United States. 'The forgotten disease' Doctor Kwaku Ohene-Frempong is the attending hematologist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and the former director of the hospital's Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center. He's been studying and treating the disease for 40 years and knows firsthand how devastating it can be. Last year he lost his 40 year old son to complications from the disease. The average life span for someone with the disease is 40 to 50 years old. "People used to hear a lot more about sickle cell disease in the 70s than now and often they think maybe this problem has been solved," says Ohene-Frempong. "It hasn't been solved yet. There are many more children with the disease now than before." Despite the fact that it has been known and studied for over 100 years, and it was one of the first diseases identified as being caused by a flawed molecule - hemoglobin, there is no cure and it lags behind similar diseases in both research funding and media attention. "Everybody thought that if we embarked on gene therapy, sickle cell disease would be one of the first to be treated because it is so well known. But we've had gene therapy for 15 years or so and not a single bona fide attempt at gene therapy has been done on sickle cell disease," says Ohene-Frempong. While there are treatments for the disease, and life expectancy has increased over the years, patients and advocates are frustrated there hasn't been more progress. There is no treatment that will completely block complications and no universally effective cure on the horizon. Sickle cell disease is often called "the forgotten disease," but there are many patients and doctors working for better treatments and an eventual cure. Disparities and diagnoses If you are up early enough, and brave enough, you might be one of the regulars at Marjorie Dejoie's boot camp fitness class at the 12th Street Gym in Center City. Katy Perry's girl-power anthem "Roar" pours out of wall mounted speakers. "It's the M.A.D. Fit morning wake up call!" says Dejoie, as she turns up the volume, turns up the bass and turns up the tempo to energize the class. Dejoie's class is a one-hour, customized version of cross fit training called M.A.D. Fitness. If you watch Dejoie in action at 6 a.m., you might think that "mad" refers to anybody willing to submit to pushups at that hour. But the letters stand for "Make a Difference," which is what Dejoie strives to do, helping her students build strength and stamina. She teaches M.A.D fit twice a week, is a practicing physician and the medical director of the Philadelphia and Delaware Valley chapter of the Sickle Cell Disease Association. Dejoie has been teaching M.A.D. Fit since med school. She starts each day at 4:30 am and barely has enough time to fit everything in. Doctor Dejoie has sickle cell disease and for her, fitness is "prescribed." It's as important to her treatment as drugs and she has written about managing sickle cell pain without the use of drugs. "Even if you can never stay ahead of a chronic illness, this helps me keep going," she says. "I was diagnosed late in life. I wouldn't be as healthy without it." Dejoie suffered for years from debilitating attacks of severe pain, called a pain crisis. She was mystified by her symptoms. "I would get into a lot of pain and nothing would seem to alleviate the pain. And I couldn't reboot, I couldn't get any energy or even think until the pain subsided." For years doctors did blood work and took x-rays but never tested her for sickle cell disease. "At one point they thought I was just making it up," says Dejoie. "And I was like 'trust me, I would not make up what I'm going through right now.'" When Dejoie was born in New York in 1971 sickle cell disease was not included in the mandatory battery of newborn screening. The testing was not mandatory across the United States until 2006, although some states did test prior to the national mandate. She was diagnosed at 23 while she was a medical student at The University of Pennsylvania. She says she was lucky to be a student at a teaching hospital that was experienced in treating the disease. In my first year I had a crisis and one of the administrators looked at me and said, 'Your symptoms sound like sickle cell disease,' and I said, 'What in the world is that?" Doctors and advocates celebrated mandated testing but the lateness of the mandate is still frustrating.

Pushing for public awareness At a time when branding and messaging extends to disease awareness - think pink ribbon campaigns for breast cancer and red ribbon campaigns for AIDS – sickle cell disease is still playing catch up. In looking at disparities, the disease is often compared to hemophilia, a much rarer blood disease that seems to have better public recognition --- and cystic fibrosis, also more rare, but which annually brings in about 10 times more research funds. Dr. Carlton Haywood is a core faculty member of "Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics." He has written about the role that race plays in the health care experiences of sickle cell patients. He recently had his second hip replaced due to complications from the disease. He had his first hip replaced in his early 20s after years of joint pain. His recent publication, The Impact of Race and Disease on Sickle Cell Patient Wait Time in the Emergency Department, found that sickle cell patients experienced wait times 25 percent longer than the "General Patient Sample." This occurred even when sickle cell patients were assigned higher (more urgent) triage numbers. He says "it would be naïve to overlook" the notion that race might be behind some of the disparities in funding and research advances for other diseases compared to sickle cell. He points to the predominately white "demographic make up of hemophilia and cystic fibrosis." "Given the nature of race and race relations in the history of the United States and given the history of this disease, and the fact that it has been mistakenly thought to be a purely race specific disease that only affects the black population and no other, I think that it certainly has played a role." Haywood says it's impossible to quantify the affects of race or racism on the advancement of treatment and research, but the issue is troubling. "When you take a look at some of the wide resource disparities between sickle cell disease and other conditions, unfortunately it still begs the question, it still raises the concern." Hoping for a cure Since newborn screening was mandated, the treatment landscape has looked more promising. The use of penicillin, starting early in chldhood, has made a big impact and cut down on complications. Diagnosed as a newborn, Nadir Tinsley was able to begin penicillin immediately and contiues to take the antibiotic. "Penicillin prophalaxis has reduced the highest rate of mortality in the disease that used to be seen in the first three to five years of life," says Dr. Ohene-Frempong, hematologist at CHOP. While nothing has been developed to completely block complications, Hydroxyurea, a drug originally developed for cancer, has been used to treat adults, and is close to being recommended for treatment in children. Bone marrow transplants have cured a small number of patients and Doctor Alan Flake, Director of Fetal Research at Children's Hospital, is working on a bone marrow transplant procedure that could be done in-utero – on fetuses diagnosed with the disease. Flake's research is seen as a "potential breakthrough" in moving towards a cure. While there are advancements on the horizon, adequate funding from individuals and corporate sponsors is still the main issue in sickle cell disease research. Dr. Ohene-Frempong says that sickle cell disease research has been going on at Children's Hospital since the 1970s and it still comes down to finding enough money to move the research forward. "We are close to solving some of these problems and we need the public's support and attention". Since she found out she had sickle cell disease, doctor Dejoie has focused improving the lives of patients and ending the disease - she lobbies on Capitol Hill, organizes fundraisers, researches and writes journal articles. Every day, she pushes herself to do a little more. Every day she pushes against time. "I get sick every week, every other week, every month, says Dejoie. "But I find a way to keep moving forward. We are survivors. We are warriors."

August 15, 2014 |The Pulse

The Walter Brandon Sickle Cell 5K Run/Walk this Saturday, September 27th @ Fairmount Park

Sickle Cell Champion, Walter Brandon lost his life from complications of Sickle Cell Anemia and was one of the founders of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America (SCDAA) Del/Valley Chapter in Philadelphia that his wife Zemoria Brandon is the Director. I started working at the Marian Anderson Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center @ St. Christopher's Hospital in 2009, after he passed away. I would always hear patients, families and people in the community talk about Mr. Brandon and whished I could have met him. Mr. Brandon moved to Philadelphia, PA from Chicago, IL where he was recruited by the Director of the Sickle Cell program at St. Christopher's Dr. Carlton Dampier as the Social Worker of the sickle cell program. Sickle Cell Hematologist, Dr. Dampier heavily regarded Mr. Brandon and begged for him and his family to move to Philadelphia, PA after he finished Medical School and Residency at the University of Chicago.

Many patients and people in the community talked about his resilience and passion for giving back to children and families with sickle cell. Mrs. Zemoria Brandon (his late wife) shared with me that he was also social justice advocate for quality care programs and outreach for sickle cell. Even though he suffered from debilitating Avascular Necrosis of his Hips (bone rubbing on bone) and other complications as he got older, he came to work faithfully with his crutches. Mr. Brandon was at work where he suddenly collapsed and passed away.

17th Annual Walter Brandon Sickle Cell 5K Walk/Run Registration Opens @ 7am & Race Starts 8am Saturday, September 27th at Fairmount Park Sign-Up: www.sicklecelldisorder.com

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Dr. Anderson thanks the community for supporting Sickle Cell Awareness in Delaware

Tova Community,

I appreciate the collective efforts and support for all who came out to support Sickle Cell Awareness in Delaware last Saturday, September 13, 2014 at Brandywine Park. In all of my professional career, I never seen such recognition from a disease that was oftentimes unspoken of. Today, thanks to better awareness and management of sickle cell, people are living long quality of lives. One of the gentleman in the 5K was a patient of mine who is 73 years of age and completed the 5K walk and won in his age group! Also had another patient with severe avascular necrosis of both hips (bone rubbing on bone) walked the entire 5K in honor of sickle cell. He completed the entire 5K race in pain but wanted to accomplish this goal. We will continue to soldier on in the fight but the future for Sickle Cell in Delaware and around the nation and world is looking bright! I encourage all young adults and adults to utilize the Sickle Cell Medical Home.

All the best, Dr. Anderson

Friday, September 12, 2014

Sickle Cell Awareness 5K Run/Walk tomorrow at Brandywine Park by the Zoo

September is National Sickle Cell Awareness Month.

Tova Community Health Inc. has its major fundraiser, Sickle Cell Awareness 5k Run/Walk on Saturday, September 13th at Brandywine Park (by the Brandywine Zoo) in Wilmington, DE. Registration starts at 9am and the Race begins at 10am. Sickle Cell Disease is one of the most common inherited blood disorders in the U.S. It is oftentimes misunderstood and invisible but can be very painful and debilitating. Today, thanks to better management of the disease, people affected by the disease can live a longer quality of life. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Sickle Cell Disease is a public health priority that affects people of many ethnicities around the world. Over 2 million people in the U.S. carry the Sickle Cell Trait and can pass the disease on to their children. Proceeds from the event will help fund access to high quality of care programs and research to improve the quality of life for those affected by the disease.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Sickle Cell Awareness 5K Billboard on MLK Boulevard at the Riverfront

Tova Community, We are almost a week away from the 3rd James Faucett III 5K Run/Walk which will be held on Saturday, September 13, 2014 at Brandywine Park in Wilmington, DE by the Brandywine Zoo. Come out to show your support for Sickle Cell Awareness in Delaware.

Did you know? -Rapper Prodigy suffers from Sickle Cell Disease.

Tova thanks Clear Channel for the Billboard & Design.

All the best, Dr. Nina