Showing posts with label advocacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advocacy. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2010

Race Myeloma Awareness

A verrrry bad pun - "raise" myeloma awareness - get it?

Myeloma patient Keith May and the IMF have entered a racecar design called "The Survivor" in a contest called Sponsafier. The winning entry will be built as a full sized car, showcased at a NASCAR race, and your votes can help push us across the finish line.

This will raise awareness of myeloma, the International Myeloma Foundation, the great work being done to change the course of myeloma, and the work that still needs to be done. Here's what you can do:

Just take 30 seconds every day until August 28, click nascar.myeloma.org, wait for the screen to develop, and simply click the “vote” button. You don't have to log on or enter ANY information. For extra credit, you can do this with every computer that you have available, every day.

“The Survivor” is one of several hundred entries in the Sponsafier contest. Some are just artistic designs and some like Keith’s support a cause. Now we all have the opportunity to support Keith, myeloma awareness, and the IMF by voting every day for the next 11 days, and by asking your friends, families, and colleagues to vote too.

The messages on the car are simple: “Beat myeloma to the finish line,” and simply “Beat Cancer.” What better way to get there than by racing? Click nascar.myeloma.org.

The Survivor

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Critical Elements of Health Reform

I received an email today from the International Myeloma Foundation (IMF) asking me to post about the Cancer Patient Statement of Principles, to help assure that the essential elements of health reform will become law despite the current partisan tension.
International Myeloma Foundation

Happy to do it! These elements are:
  • Affordable access to basic and catastrophic health care coverage for as many Americans as possible.
  • The elimination of "pre-existing conditions" as a barrier to health care coverage.
  • The elimination of annual and lifetime caps on insurance coverage.
  • Closing of the Medicare "donut hole."
  • Continued investment in research and innovation to address the needs of those with all deadly diseases.
To show your support for these priorities, please visit the IMF advocacy page and contact your Senators and Congressperson.  And feel free to blog about it yourself!

Thank you!    Don

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Our Voices Matter

I've been a mighty lucky guy throughout my myeloma voyage, at least so far. I had a great doctor watching me through MGUS and smoldering, and then was lucky to get a wonderful Mayo doctor who used an PET scan to determine that I was symptomatic BEFORE any bones broke, and got me on a trial of pomalidomide, which has kept me stable (and running!) for the better part of two years. And my insurance has been good.

Others are not so lucky, and I meet many of them in our local Twin Cities support groups. Many have broken bones or other organ damage because of poor diagnosis, or have been on every approved and available treatment including autologous and allogenic stem cell transplants, and don't know what to do next. Many have struggled with their insurance companies or with Medicare to get the treatment that their doctor advises, and some have chosen a less-preferred treatment because insurance would not cover the preferred one.
International Myeloma Foundation
The International Myeloma Foundation (IMF) has joined with the Myelodysplastic Syndrome Foundation and the Tackle Cancer Foundation to create a Cancer Patient Statement of Principles. Hover over any one for a more complete description of that principle, or click it to download the full document from an IMF web page:
These seem to be common-sense fundamentals, but we don't have them now. Example: Insurance may pay for Velcade, because it is administered as an IV drip in a hospital or clinic setting. But insurance may not pay for Revlimid, because it is a prescription. Therefore the patient may choose Velcade and drive to a hospital several times a month, possibly hundreds of miles, even though the doctor might believe that Revlimid would have been the better treatment for this patient.

Example 2: I know several people now who have died from myeloma which progressed because nothing worked any longer. I wish those friends could have had the pomalidomide that I am taking, or the carfilzomib that is also on the horizon. Who knows - they might still be with us.

Needless to say I believe strongly in these principles. They make a lot of sense to a cancer patient. So what do we do about it? Lobby! Right now health care legislation is big news, with large issues like "how will we pay for it all" taking up most of the air. Nevertheless, our issues will require new legislation. There are congressmen on both sides of the aisle willing to get behind a bill, or perhaps an amendment, when the time is right. Whether this happens as a part of a huge new health care bill or as a follow-up bill, the IMF needs support for its lobbying effort in Washington.

If you agree with these principles, I encourage you take action, and to send an email to your representative and your senators. The IMF has a web page which makes it easy to do that and to learn more about pending legislation and even to sign up to be notified about changes.

Thank you!

More ASH news coming up, stay tuned. -- Don