Time to Advocate!
Today (Feb 27) and tomorrow (Feb 28), hundreds of people with arthritis will be visiting Capitol Hill to urge their Senators and Representatives to become cosponsors of the Arthritis Prevention Control and Cure Act. These advocates are serious. They open up to their members of Congress, sharing their personal stories of what life is like with arthritis and how Congress members can help improve the situation for the millions of other people who have some form of the disease.
Two years ago, I was one of the advocates who climbed the steps and walked the halls to share information and stories of people with arthritis with elected officials in the Senate and House of Representatives. Some of the stories I shared came from the stories that readers of Arthritis Today told me. The impact was strong, and many members of the last Congress signed on as cosponsors, meaning they would help form the two-thirds majority needed to get the Bill containing the Act through the process of becoming passed. Unfortunately, the number of cosponsors in the last Congress didn't quite reach the two-thirds majority, so with the new Congress in place, we must start again. Yesterday the Virtual Summit began. If you want to urge your Senators and Representatives to cosponsor the Act, so that funding for arthritis research and medical care for those with various forms of arthritis can increase, click on the link to the Arthritis Foundation to the right of this box, and when you get there, click on the Advocacy tab.
This year, I sent my story to my congressional representatives via the Virtual Summit. Why? Because it's a bit different than the one I had two years ago. I hope my story gets through to my elected officials. I've pasted it here to share it with you, too:
Two years ago, I visited several Senators and Representatives on Capitol Hill to share stories of people living and trying to survive with the chronic disease rheumatoid arthritis. This year, I am one of them, having been diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis a few months ago. Two years ago, I visited your office, Dr. Price, to inform your staff about the seriousness of arthritis with hopes that you would support the Act. I am extremely disappointed that you have not yet done so. And that same year I interviewed you, Senator Isakson, to share your reasons for supporting the Act (thank you) with the readers of Arthritis Today magazine. I believe you were presented with a plaque containing the article that may be hanging in your office right now. Back then, I was advocating for people with arthritis for two reasons. The first reason was personal – my grandmother died of rheumatoid arthritis when I was 18 months old and I've seen my daughter unable to walk when she was four years old due to arthritis triggered by a virus. The second reason was professional. I am the medical editor of Arthritis Today magazine, which is published by the Arthritis Foundation. Every day of my life I talk to or read about people who struggle to pay for their highly effective but highly expensive treatments so they can stay productive in their jobs and continue to be active members of society. And every day I talk to or read about people who cannot afford to do so, and therefore have (or feel they will) become a burden on society by being one of the disabled. I hear about the pain they must bear with every move they make, and I see how they try to adapt and modify tasks so they can continue to use their gnarled hands and fingers.
But now, I live with the pain, too. I still work full time, I am able to care for my three children, I am successfully pregnant with my fourth child and I know to take good care of myself to help reduce or stall future disability. But rheumatoid arthritis is unpredictable and can be extremely aggressive. Who's to say in 10 years I won't have damaged joints that reduce my ability to work or care for my kids? Who's to say that once I deliver the child I am carrying, my condition won't change drastically, as it can, and leave me unable to hold my new baby? Who's to say that because I have rheumatoid arthritis I won't develop cancer, as can happen, and require more of the country's economic health care dollars. A new study, now appearing in the March 2007 issue of the journal Arthritis & Rheumatism, shows that people with inflammatory arthritis, such as rheumatoid arthritis, have at least twice the risk of death from disease than the general population.
I am sure you've heard the latest number on the impact of arthritis on the economy: 128 billion dollars! And most likely that amount will continue to rise unless some money in the budget is directed toward research that will help create treatments to keep more people working and fewer people from becoming disabled.
This year, I still advocate for those same reasons, but this year I implore you to support the Act for an additional reason: To help increase the number of rheumatologists in this country. Now that I am a patient of a rheumatologist, I experience first hand the extraordinary wait times for appointments. I've spent six hours in a waiting room myself during an appointment and I've waited weeks for phone or e-mail response from my excellent but seriously overworked/overbooked doctor. I have also written an article for Arthritis Today magazine about the increasing shortage of rheumatologists. I sat at the American College of Rheumatology meeting when results of a study of the situation were unveiled and heard a well-known Penn economist describing how health care doesn't just take a huge bite out of the economy but how it IS the economy.
It is astounding to me how few doctors we'll have to care for people in the future, especially rheumatologists, when arthritis is now the number one cause of disability in this country and carries such a huge economic impact. It also is astounding to me how the shortage of rheumatologists will grow right along with the age of the general population. As the number of senior citizens increases over the next decade or so, the number of doctors available to diagnose and treat conditions associated with aging, such as osteoarthritis, is decreasing. It just doesn't make sense. You can help solve these problems by supporting the Arthritis Prevention Control and Cure Act. The provisions in that Act state that money will go toward research and to help ease the financial burden on doctors coming out of a residency who may choose a higher-paying subspecialty over the low-paying rheumatology subspecialty. Medical reimbursements for rheumatologists are so low that some doctors who have the desire to become a rheumatologist end up choosing another subspecialty so they aren't thrust into debt for years. Helping them through rheumatology training will ensure more rheumatologists in the future -- when we will need them dearly.
It's wonderful that science is getting closer to figuring out what goes wrong in the body to cause autoimmune diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, or how inflammation affects not only rheumatoid arthritis but possibly also plays a role in osteoarthritis. It's also wonderful that pharmaceutical companies and orthopaedic specialists are making progress in creating treatments for these conditions. However, as one prominent rheumatologist from the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City said, "If we can't get the medications to the people who need them [due to a lack of rheumatologists in the U.S.] then shame on us."
Shame on us, indeed, and shame on you if you do not see how arthritis is every bit as important as the other chronic diseases in this country and support the Arthritis Prevention Control and Cure Act. Please say you will. I will do everything I can to preserve my health and reduce the amount of health care I personally consume. I hope you will do everything you can to help the growing number of people in this country who are being diagnosed with some form of arthritis to get the care they need, get the treatments they need and get the information they need to take care of themselves, too.
Thank you for your time.
1 Comments:
I realize that I'm reading this well after the fact (April 22), but BRAVO!! Your letter is so perfect and on target, how can anyone not listen? I have a number of autoimmune diseases and conditions including psoriatic arthritis, fibromyalgia, chronic myofacial pain, among others as well as numerous other medical conditions. Very few people understand what is wrong because I don't "look sick" to them. But I too continue to work full time and refuse to be a burden on anyone until I absolutely have to. But the really good rheumatologists are not covered at the same rate under most insurance plans (because they refuse to reduce their rates to nothing like the insurance plans want them to do) so my doctor visit costs are high, my prescription drugs are about $3000 above insurance coverage per year and this is all above my time spent waiting for time with my doctor, who is wonderful and the reason I am able to work at all (which at one time I wasn't). So, yes, I will do whatever needs to be done to help pass that Act if its not too late!
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