Showing posts with label Advocacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advocacy. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Raising FPIES awareness on The Mighty

A diagnosis of FPIES can be life-altering.  So, when The Mighty asked our community for some of the things parents of children living with FPIES are doing, because of the diagnosis, that other people may not realize, the response was incredible.  


With over 150 million readers and thousands of contributors, The Mighty has been building a community of online rare disease support.  They “publish real stories by real people facing real challenges”.   They have created a safe platform for rare disease community members and organizations to connect with others, share their stories while raising awareness and support for rare diseases as a whole.  Together we are strong. 



The Mighty has given us the opportunity to share your experiences in stories such as:




We are proud to be among the over 200 rare disease non-profit organizations that support and partner with The Mighty. We will continue to bring additional awareness stories in the future. 

If you would like to contribute a story, please visit https://themighty.com/submit-a-story/

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Power of the PIN

In 2013 we, at The FPIES Foundation, presented the first-of-its-kind FPIES Global Patient Registry through the Patient Crossroads CONNECT program a patient registry platform companyLast year, Patient Crossroads underwent a rebranding to become AltaVoice.  Through Altavoice we were introduced to the Power of the Patients Insights Network (PIN) which enables us to further amplify the voice of children and families living with FPIES to help researchers and potential drug developers find better treatments, faster.


What is AltaVoice?
AltaVoice, formally Patient Crossroads, is a patient-centered data company that optimizes the search for better treatments for diseases.  They build and host Patient Insights Networks (PINs). PINs are ideal for collecting, curating and sharing patient and clinician reported health data. Altavoice works with drug developers, advocacy organizations, like The FPIES Foundation, and academic researchers, uniting them with patients to help improve lives.

What is a PIN?
A PIN stands for Patients Insights Network.  An AltaVoice PIN is more powerful than a traditional registry. It is an interactive, online platform for surveying patients, uploading medical records, tracking health outcomes and sharing de-identified disease data. Additionally, unlike typical clinician-driven registries, PINs are patient powered. The AltaVoice PINs make it easy for families to share their child’s experience, contribute medical data and maintain their privacy while being connected to the latest research, treatment and disease education opportunities.

Sharing Data & Improving Care
The AltaVoice PIN model was built with patients at the center, in control of their data. They believe strongly that advances are made faster when data collection is standardized and advocacy groups, such as ours, include the data in a global network, among other rare diseases that may share commonalities.
We share AltaVoices goals to encourage the sharing of de-identified data and studying findings to help patients learn how others manage similar health challenges. Sharing data also helps quantify the patient journey and build a stronger case for improving care.

Your Privacy
AltaVoice remains passionate about using their expertise to save time, lower costs and improve patients’ lives in a protected environment. Protecting patient data while providing broad access to health information is the cornerstone of their system design. AltaVoice rigorously manages and operates all systems to comply with HIPAA, FISMA and data and patient protection laws.

Inherited & Rare Diseases
AltaVoice has also partnered with Invitae to create new offerings to advance research and access to care for patient with inherited and rare diseases.  While FPIES is not known to be a genetic condition, this merger enables our registry to be open to collecting the data needed for investigating FPIES as a genetic condition.  We are excited for these possibilities under our free FPIES Patient Registry. 

The AltaVoice PIN provide patients, The FPIES Foundation, and research groups with a platform where they direct how, when, and with whom to share their clinical, and in the future, genetic, information to benefit their children and families and further research efforts for FPIES.


Register on the FPIES Registry here: www.fpiesregistry.com






Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Global FPIES Day 2016 Impact: How we made a difference

It’s been a month since we celebrated Global FPIES Day and we’d like to take a look back at all we shared and accomplished together.

Tools that Build Bridges

This year’s theme was “Tools that Build Bridges” and we were able to provide some amazing new tools to help families and spread awareness. They can be found on the Global FPIES Day webpage.
  1. We released 9 video presentations for FPIES families. The entire playlist can be seen here.
  2. We debuted our new Online Learning Library, where you can find multimedia resources for education and awareness.
  3. We offered multilingual resources to reach out to a wider audience and help as many families struggling with FPIES as possible.
  4. We focused on nutrition with the release of our nutrition worksheets, which can be found on the Global FPIES Day page and the Online Learning Library. We also talked about the Nutrition Webinar, which was held on October 25th.
  5. We partnered with The Mighty, an online community for people struggling with serious challenges, such as health or mental illnesses. Check out this blog post contributed by The Mighty for more information. We also used Facebook to ask you “What’s one secret you wish others knew about caring for someone with FPIES?” The Mighty used your answers to put together a wonderful blog post, 19 Secrets Families With FPIES Wish Others Knew.
  6. We hosted an FPIES Twitter chat with Foundation volunteer Victoria Warren and MAB member Dr. Sakina Bajowala about the ins and outs of emergency care. We’ll be posting a summary here on the blog, so watch for that soon!

Families

And of course, many FPIES families found their own ways to build bridges and spread awareness. As in previous years, some created and shared a “I am the voice” picture frame. You can view the online album here.

Others took some time on Global Day to post about FPIES on Facebook, to change their profile picture to the FPIES day button or picture frame, and some even held their own events. Mom and LuLaRoe Consultant put together a family fundraiser, while the Litteral family handed out flyers featuring their “I am the voice” picture frame.

We want to thank them and all the families who reached out to others and found ways to talk about FPIES on Global Day!

Partners

We also want to give a shout-out to our partner organizations who helped spread the word by sharing information about FPIES and Global FPIES Day on their social media accounts and websites. Sarah’s FPIESClubhouse put on a great awareness campaign, including some Webkinz giveaways.

Several of our partners, including CMNuA, No Biggie Bunch, and Global Genes, tweeted or retweeted about Global Day. You can see those by searching for GlobalFPIESDay on Twitter. Others posted or shared our posts on Facebook, including AllergyFree, Feeding Tube Awareness, and My Munch Bug. You can see those by searching for Global FPIES Day on Facebook.

There were many, many other partners who got involved on Global Day and we are so grateful for all the support!

Presenters

Finally, we want to say thank you to the amazing presenters who created the online videos. Your contributions were a large part of this year’s Global FPIES Day and it wouldn’t have been the same without you!

To all who participated in Global FPIES Day 2016, you made a difference! We know that as we take these tools and move forward, we will continue to build bridges and find ways to help children and families struggling with FPIES.

We’d love to hear how you spent Global Day this year, so please comment below and let us know!

This post was written by FPIES Foundation volunteer Aubrey Fredrickson.  Aubrey is a freelance writer and mother of two. Although not personally touched by FPIES, she is grateful for the opportunity to be involved with the families and volunteers of the FPIES Foundation.

Monday, July 11, 2016

When Life Hits the Fan

When Life Hits the Fan
A guest post by Honor Genetski

I've been getting my share of lessons in acceptance lately. I choose to see it this way rather than as a run of bad luck because without fail I am more grateful, more clear-seeing, and more resourced on the other side of these stretches. When it's happening I obviously just want it all to go away. 

It started a few months ago when Lemon caught a stomach bug. It hit her hard, but I thought after a few days of gut rest she'd be back to her normal cheery self. Instead her entire system unraveled and she lost the ability to digest anything. She survived on broth for another month while we waited for this monster to run its course. It was a lot of waiting in the dark.

When Lemon gets sick no one knows what's happening. This time after lab work ruled out a few common bacteria and parasites, I was told by her pediatrician that she would defer to me since I was the expert on my daughter's health. I sat with these words for a minute unsure if that was actually a good thing in this case. 

There really isn't a net to catch this child when she falls. I hold her on the way down and we fall together. 

It has me thinking about how we all find ourselves in the depths at one time or another and have to find a way through. Holding healing for yourself or for someone you love is a commitment to staying present with fear, exhaustion, and every joyous gain. It's allowing yourself to be right where you are with the tools you've got.

And rock-bottom serves its purpose in that it's a place to take inventory on what is and isn't working, and to resource for the next steps.

The following ideas are some of my most tried and true methods for navigating the deep and making my way back home again. Hopefully they will help you too the next time life hits the fan in your house.

~ Feel your feet connecting with the earth. This is the most immediate kind of grounding work and can be done anywhere, anytime. There is only so much freaking out you can do while your focus is on your feet.

~ Practice gratitude about anything and everything. Say it out loud. This is life-changing work because it makes acceptance of what is feel bigger.

~ Ask for what you need (or want) from your partner, spouse, friend, and extended family. Don't expect them to know until you verbalize it.

~ Explore more forms of support than you think you need (support groups, therapy, friend time, exercise). 

~ Connect with resources that align with your values – make sure it’s a right fit. If it isn't, allow yourself to explore other options. 

~ Create a space to be with yourself. Choose a place where you feel connected with something bigger than you. Church, yoga, a meditation circle, standing in the forest, or immersing in water. 

~ Some days collapse is a necessary and logical response to what life brings. Go there and find the gem of stillness buried inside. When you feel ready get up and start again.



Honor is a Marriage and Family Therapist, and mom to a child with FPIES.  Honor follows her intuition and hope in the quest for healing on Therapist Mama. where this blog post originally appeared.  It is shared here with permission.  

Friday, May 13, 2016

The Miracle of FPIES

Every family is unique and weaves an important piece in our overall understanding of FPIES as well as the impact-- medical and non-medical-- this rare diagnosis has on our families, children and professionals. As you read the story that follows, please remember that though your family's story may differ in some ways, we as a community all strive to make each story heard in order to raise awareness to all points on the spectrum of this challenging condition. If you wish to share your story, please check out our inspiring families page and complete the form to submit your story.  We want to thank the community for all that you do to support and empower one another day in and day out, no matter where our own family's journey finds us. Remember that your greatest gift to each other and to our community can be your voice.

This post is adapted and shared with us from a blog post originally appearing on 
Our Stable Table Facebook page by Carrie Saum

Carrie and Echo

27 months ago, our world changed dramatically.

We discovered that our sweet son, who was just 8 months old at the time, had a rare condition called FPIES. At first, we didn't understand what that meant.  We knew that it was a food allergy syndrome. We knew there were foods that would make him sick. We knew he might or might not grow out of it. And in the back of our minds, we carried with us the knowledge that he there could be serious consequences from reaction complications.

As our knowledge grew, so did our fear. He vomited to the point of shock, twice. His blood pressure plummeted and he lost consciousness. We finally pulled all food (formula/breast milk being his sole nutrition) when he was diagnosed because he threw up every food we gave him, no matter what form, always in a 2-3 hour window, and nobody had answers about why he had this or how to fix it.

We still don't know.

I dug into every piece of research available. I combed forums, Facebook pages, blogs, and medical journals. I spent HUNDREDS of hours pulling information and trying to formulate a plan to help heal my baby son. His doctor, who is a remarkable human and care provider, was at a loss. She only knew of the condition because of a friend, and admitted she knew very little about it and how to treat it. She supported our decisions, chimed in with information when she had it, and helped us brainstorm how to keep him healthy and growing and on target for reaching developmental milestones. No specialists in our area knew anything about FPIES, or how to treat it. When it came right down to it, we were on our own.

In public, we couldn't let our son out of our sight. We couldn't allow him to roam when food was around, which was always. We made everyone wash their hands and faces before touching and hugging our very reactive toddler. We became human helicopters and even so, our son still suffered. His skin erupted and oozed, his diapers filled with blood, his stomach emptied itself until there was nothing, not even bile. Food was a looming, thieving threat, when it should have been life-giving.

In addition to solid information and helpful research available to us, groups of families who also dealt with this disease rose up and reached out their arms. They welcomed us, a warrior tribe of virtual strangers, into their fold. They vented, cried, rejoiced, and helped us fight our way through the very hardest and darkest days.  They offered advice, compiled their own research, encouraged me to follow my intuition to give my son an extended gut rest in hopes of healing enough to tolerate food.

These warrior parents told me how to start an elimination diet that helped me clear reactive foods from my breastmilk. They encouraged me when I wanted to quit, and offered empathy when I was up all night for a week with a sick, reactive baby.

Our little corner of the internet, Our Stable Table, came from all of that heartache. It came from the sleepless nights, a sick baby for which there was no real help, the 21 months of exclusive breastmilk pumping, the 12 months on a strict elimination diet,parents and caregivers who did not quit and would not let me quit, and the place where hope is completely buried beneath heartache and debilitating fear and numbing exhaustion.

It is a miracle that we did not break.

It is a miracle we are intact.

It is a miracle we are still surviving.

As any parent of a child with extra or special needs will tell you, FPIES is life-altering. It changes your world in profound ways you cannot understand until it happens to you. FPIES has robbed us of health, sleep, finances, emotional stability, and almost our marriage. But it has not taken our son. It has given us an army of families who understand and help. It has given us purpose and deep empathy. It has given us gratitude for every breath, every bite of food, and every single day we get to be on this earth.
 
Echo


In one breath, I say to you all, our son is a miracle, just as much as FPIES is our tribulation.

Our babies are miracles. Our ability to continue fighting for them is a miracle. And we never, ever get to forget that.Even though we are drenched in vomit, we are covered in strength. FPIES will not win, it will be our greatest teacher of perseverance, hope, wit, and tenacity as parents and families. 

This is what FPIES awareness looks like. Vomit and miracles. Hope and community. You, dear families with children with extra and special needs, are ALWAYS welcome at our table.

Love,
Echo, Carrie, and Lance
Carrie, Echo, and Lance 

Carrie is an author, recipe creator, food lover, and loves connecting people in her online community,www.ourstabletable.com. With a great sense of humor, warmth, and vulnerability, Carrie brings genuine reality to the Internet, along with tasty food and slightly inappropriate jokes. After receiving her paramedic medical training, Carrie spent a decade abroad and in the U.S. in the non-profit medical sector, before venturing into the world of Ayurveda and integrated health in 2011.
Carrie uses her skills mostly for good these days while caring for her son with extra needs and helping clients from all over the world meet their health goals. She loves spending time around the table with her family and friends. She lives in Portland, Oregon. 

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Building FPIES Awareness through Fundraising and Events

Over the last year we have been inspired by the impact of your unique talents and hard work as you continue building awareness to FPIES.   As we approach our 2nd annual Global Day, we wish to share some of these events with everyone, in hopes to inspire you, that you too can make a difference.  “Our shoes may be small but our steps will be BIG!”

FPIES families have always been creative, including in how they raise awareness and fund-raise! We have had several moms using  Jamberry fundraisers, and even a couple of these moms designed the nail wraps themselves to feature FPIES awareness art. Awareness from fingers to toes! Other moms have designed T-shirts and other awareness gear to raise funds to further FPIES education and awareness. Their creativity has helped fund programs to educate medical professionals about FPIES. We want to give special shout-outs to Jessie Ipson Richens, Kate Hutchens, Crystal Lentz, Brandi of Glam Tots, Rosie's Creations, and Half Pint Threads!

Restaurants have joined in the cause, sponsoring family nights and awareness days where they donate a certain percentage of sales to The FPIES Foundation. We were touched to see photos from Jersey Mike's Subs-- a visual reminder of how communities are really joining in the cause and reaching out to support  FPIES awareness. The families initiating these fundraisers and the restaurants partnering in the cause have helped to fund programs providing resources and support to families worldwide. Special recognition for Luca's family for all of their support!

In every fundraiser and in every awareness event, families put their own unique stamp on the day.  Just as each child is unique, each family-organized event has its own special style. The Fangman Family, for instance, raises awareness at Drag Races and Mud Runs!  Samantha Fangman shares, “Our daughter, Josie, has FPIES. My husband had decals made for his race-car with the FPIES logo. We have brochures printed that we hand out at all our races. We were amazed how many people came up and asked us what FPIES and The FPIES Foundation was at our first race. We’ve handed out many more brochures than we anticipated and are thrilled about it!!! We are doing what we can to get the word out!!“


If you are thinking about starting your own awareness event or fundraiser for the FPIES Foundation, we hope that you have found inspiration in the stories of the families highlighted above--- we certainly are inspired by all of them, and all of you, everyday as we continue working to fulfill the FPIES Foundation's mission of education, support and advocacy for all those affected by FPIES, worldwide. 


This post was written by the Executive Board of The FPIES Foundation 

Sunday, August 30, 2015

August 2014- August 2015: Our Fourth Year in Review


Over the last four years, we have watched our little ones grow right alongside the Foundation. So many of the new families we “met” after our founding now contact us with their inspirational stories--  we proudly hear the stories of children outgrowing FPIES and the stories of children thriving in the face of this diagnosis and learning to self-advocate. The hallmark of these past four years has clearly been connection, and here at the FPIES Foundation, we are so honored to be a part of your family's journey. As we move into our fifth year together, we strive to maintain our connections and to provide all members of this remarkable community with even more tools, resources and sources of empowerment.

So, what have we been up to since last August? We focused on:

Empowerment
  • Expanding tools for daily  life with FPIES:
Building Global Awareness and Resources by:

Education Initiatives:
  • Providing families with FPIES information at community events, such as Boston's Franklin Park Zoo, Boston FARE Walk 2014, and FASGMHN Food Allergy Resource Fair
  • Fostering online awareness events, such as our “Be the Voice,” “FPIES in a Word,” and the “FPIES Recipe Challenge” campaigns
  • Sending FPIES awareness packets to families for FPIES resources at their fingertips (contact us today for your packet!) 

  • Participation in Several Awareness Days throughout the year, such as:

    • Feeding Tube Awareness Week 
    • 'We are #FPIES. We are the #1in10' photo album online campaign for Rare Disease Day 2015; putting a face on the 1 in 10 people worldwide that suffer from some type of Rare Disease. 
    • Food Allergy Awareness Week 2015. We participated in several awareness activities including a photo album, inspired by our community, that shares pictures and corresponding words illustrating life with Food Protein Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome. .
    • May 4th was recognized in the US as a day during Food Allergy Action Month for raising ‎FPIES awareness.  Families were encouraged to raise awareness and get the conversation started with their social media accounts-- #‎AskMeAboutFPIES
    • In March, for National Nutrition Month, we asked Bailey
      Koch, RD, CSP, LD of our Medical Advisory Board to come up with some essential nutrition tips and recommendations geared towards FPIES families.
  • Debuting at Community and Scientific Events such as: 
    • The Annual NASPGHAN conference, a conference for Pediatric GI health professionals that includes Physicians, Physicians Assistants, Nurses and Dietitians, providing FPIES materials to these health practitioners vital to our children’s medical care.

    • The FARE Walk in Boston.  Amanda LeFew, Co-Director of The FPIES Foundation, greeted families,  FPIES Foundation Panel Member, Victoria Warren, Emceed, and Medical Advisory Board Members Dr. Lee, Dr.Yuan, and Dr.Shreffler were in attendance. A large meet-up of FPIES Families was celebrated!


As we look to another year ahead, we are so grateful for how much growth we have seen in the FPIES community over the years. We are humbled that all of you have shared in this journey and will hopefully remain actively involved in the years to come. It is because of your support that The FPIES Foundation has been honored, yet again, with a prestigious 2014 Top-Rated Award by GreatNonprofits. We are also proud to have been featured on Rare Disease Day recap from our friends at Global Genes. We would like to send a big thank you to all our families who made sure FPIES had a strong voice on this international day of awareness, and all other days this part year!

In addition to our incredible community of FPIES families, we continue to be amazed at the tireless efforts of our Medical Advisory Board in their advocacy for FPIES and food allergies, not only among families but also among their colleagues.
  • Last October, MAB member and Registered Dietitian Bailey Koch spoke at the Pediatric Nutrition Conference of NASPGHAN, educating other professionals about FPIES.
  • The Western Society for Allergy, Asthma and Immunology Conference featured a discussion on FPIES, led by Dr. Glenn Furuta of our Medical Advisory Board, looking at the goals of the gastroenterologist in regards to FPIES care.
  • Dr. J. Andrew Bird of our Medical Advisory Board details the newly released FPIES survey discussed at the recent AAAAI meeting. The discussion focuses on gaps in the diagnosis and management of FPIES. 
  • FPIES Foundation Medical Adviser Dr. Qian Yuan, a Pediatric Gastroenterologist with Mass General Hospital, released a new children's book: “Macaroni Isn't the Same Without Cheese.” It's written to help school age children understand EoE - a message that applies to kids living with FPIES, too.

Families, supportive medical professionals, and the amazingly strong infants and children we all support continue to fuel the passion of The FPIES Foundation, every day, every year. Together, small shoes CAN take big steps towards awareness, support and advocacy.

If you would like to learn more about our activities, be sure to check out our annual reports and current events pages! If you would like to learn how you can make a greater impact, contact us today for information about volunteering and special partnerships. Join us as we continue to connect, support and empower for many years to come.

This post was written by the Executive Board of The FPIES Foundation 

Monday, February 23, 2015

FPIES Foundation joining forces with Rare Diseases Community and Global Genes

FPIES Foundation joining forces with Rare Diseases Community and Global Genes
350-million voices to make a difference

'You are not alone.' It's a mantra of sorts here at the FPIES Foundation. You are not alone on food trials, you are not alone at 3 a-m with a sick child, and you are not alone in the emergency room desperate for answers, and we will not let you be alone!

Rare Diseases Day 2015 is fast approaching on February 28th and we'd like to highlight the fact that you are not alone, and neither are we.

According to NORD and Global Genes, a disease that affects less than 200,000 people at any given time is defined as rare. FPIES is recognized as a Rare Disease, one of 7000 recognized by the National Institutes of Health. 

A rare disease is a disease that affects less than 200,000 people at any given time. That's 350-million people worldwide who might be battling a different diagnosis, but the fight for advocacy, awareness and research is the same.



That's why we're proud to partner with Global Genes - a leading global rare diseases advocacy organization.

Executive Director Andrea Epstein says when people are starting their rare disease journey it can be daunting.  Collectively, though, she says the Rare Diseases Community can come together so newcomers feel they 'don't have to reinvent the wheel.' Epstein says, "Chances are, tools for other rare diseases may be relevant,” meaning tools for day to day living that are useful for one disorder can help out another.

Global Genes specifically offers Rare Disease Tool Kits - collaborative resources updated in real time with comments and videos, focused on awareness, daily management strategies, and more. The idea is to draw on real life experiences so the next family can immediately benefit.

Took Kits currently available or in the works include:

Epstein says, "One thing we are very proud of is we create tools that all foundations or individuals can use." She points to Global Genes 'Blue Denim Ribbon Campaign' as a way everyone can raise awareness for Rare Diseases Day.

On the heels of Rare Diseases Day, Global Genes is hosting its first ever Giving Day. 'Give Rare' is March 3rd.  It's a day for the Rare Disease Community to come together in the hopes of raising millions of dollars for their individual causes. Check out the FPIES Foundation's 'GiveRare' page here: http://giverare.razoo.com/story/Fpies-Foundation 


Epstein says, "It feels really good when you know you have helped a family on their journey and made a difference." We couldn't agree more.


This article was written, and interview conducted by, Victoria Warren.  Victoria is a television news reporter for the NBC affiliate in Boston, WHDH-TV.  Victoria is a parent volunteer with The FPIES Foundation Volunteer Advisory Board.  Follow Victoria on twitter @VWarrenon7.