PARENTS AS RARE - EPISODE 077
A Rare Revolution - HITMC Meets Rare Disease with Grace Vinton, Kristy Dickinson, & Effie Parks
Grace Vinton, Kristy Dickinson and Effie Parks join me to continue our conversations from the Healthcare and IT Marketing Conference in February. Enjoy this special cross-collaboration of HIT Like a Girl, Parents As Rare, Once Upon a Gene, and Simply Unbreakable. Be sure to check out these podcasts and I'd like to also encourage you to take one actionable step this month to empower the rare disease voice in some way!
EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS
Kristy, can you share about your personal journey with rare disease and how it has inspired the work that you're doing today?
I was diagnosed at the age of 37 with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, for which there's currently no cure. My journey to diagnosis was bumpy and I experienced a lot of misdiagnosis, treatments that failed, tests, procedures and twists and turns. It was a serendipitous event that ultimately led me to my diagnosis. With a patient-centered healthcare system, it wouldn't have taken me so long to get diagnosed because my condition is genetic and I had numerous incidents through childhood and young adulthood where my disease presented itself. I got my diagnosis by seeing a nutritionist when everything else had failed. I have made it my life's mission to continue to help the rear community in any way that I can. I founded a company called Chronically Simple, a web-based and mobile app that serves as a disease management tool.
Adam, can you share about your personal journey with rare disease and how it has inspired the work that you're doing today?
About four years ago, I was a pretty healthy young guy when symptoms started popping up out of seemingly nowhere. About two years ago, I got involved in social media and advocacy, trying to find community. I felt so isolated and so alone as a parent who was going through this and working through a rare disease diagnosis. Through social media, I found community, really helpful resources, and I was excited to finally be able to not feel so alone. About a year ago, I started my own podcast and started doing speaking engagements and it's been really a wonderful journey since then. I call myself a dadvocate- I'm a dad first and a rare disease advocate second.
Effie, can you share about your personal journey with rare disease and how it has inspired the work that you're doing today?
My husband and I always wanted to be parents and we were so excited when our first little baby was coming. We had ideas, plans and fictional expectations, so we were shocked when he was born super small, and he wouldn't eat, sleep or do anything typically developing babies would do. We were brushed off for four months by doctors telling us we were just worried new parents. And finally he was admitted into a children's hospital for about a week where a geneticist ordered whole exome sequencing. They took samples from my husband and I and about eight months later we got a diagnosis of a rare disorder called CTNNB1. The geneticist told us that he was number 30 in the world with that diagnosis and that she didn't know anything about it. After about two years of trying to find answers and figure out what to do for my son myself, and trying to navigate the healthcare system with no luck, I started a podcast as a platform to tell my story and to hold a place for other people to do the same.
Effie, how does the diagnostic odyssey add color and commentary to the healthcare and healthcare innovation landscape and why is the rare experience so different from other pa...