Monthly Archives: May 2015

DS Guild of Greater Kansas City – 360 Support of Cognition Research

DSGKCBy Veronica Fratta

The Down Syndrome Guild of Kansas City (DSG) has been one of LuMind Research Down Syndrome Foundation’s strongest supporters. Today, we’d like to shine a light on all the good work they are doing.

Amy Allison is the Guild’s director of 13 years. When she arrived, many DSG programs were directed towards infants and young children. She made it her mission to reach out to families with older children and adults with Down syndrome, and today DSG offers a vast array of programs for people from birth to 70. With 1,300 members in 37 counties and two states (Kansas and Missouri), the Guild helps many individuals over a large area.

It became evident early on that DSG also needed to expand outreach efforts beyond serving families to include school districts, service providers, and medical professionals, or DSG would just be “preaching to the choir.” DSG began an extremely successful program to educate and train these other organizations to better interact with and support individuals with Down syndrome. The Guild’s Parents and Schools in Partnership program has been so effective that DSG has consulted with 15 other Down syndrome organizations to help them launch the program.

Another area where DSG has been heavily involved is cognition research. The members of DSG recognized that finding a therapies that could improve memory and cognition would be key to advancing opportunities and quality of life for people with Down syndrome. Since research was beyond the scope of DSG’s abilities, the organization sought out a research entity that had the contacts, the know-how, and the resources to make a real difference…which is where LuMind RDS Foundation comes in!

That journey led to Amy joining our board, becoming an invaluable member for the past three years. She’s dedicated to helping us find treatments to improve the lives of our loved ones with Down syndrome. As Amy says, “Increasing the IQ of a person with Down syndrome by 15-20 points is dramatically life changing. It can mean the difference between living at home and working in a sheltered workshop or being competitively employed while living in the community.”

DSG has reached out to other Down syndrome affiliates to encourage them to also support cognition research. By contributing to the LuMind RDS Foundation, their members will also be benefactors of this important ongoing research.

DSG strongly encourages their members to participate in the DS-Connect registry. As Amy points out, “If we can populate the registry, researchers will be more likely to focus on Down syndrome research and a cohort will be ready when clinical trials come to fruition.” After families contribute health information, researchers can use that information to identify similarities, differences, and trends among people with Down syndrome. This can lead to exciting new developments in cognition and medical research to benefit those living with the condition.

We feel very fortunate to count the Down Syndrome Guild of Kansas City and Amy Allison as LuMind supporters and partners as we jointly work to improve the lives of those who have Down syndrome.

Thank you Amy Allison and the DSG for 360 support of our mission – through generous donations, helping to raise awareness of the need for cognition research and integral resources such as DS-Connect, as well as encouraging other DSAs to join our cause.

100 Holes of Golf: Are You Up for The Challenge?

Can we get 10 people in 10 cities, each playing 100 holes of golf? That’s 1000 holes of golf, each one funding Down syndrome cognition research.

Alan Gard Personal Image

By Alan Gard

My two-year-old son, Alijah, has Down syndrome, and the last two years I have done the Hundred Hole Hike to raise money for Ds causes. The Hundred Hole Hike is a golf “marathon” where participants walk and play 100 or more holes of golf in one day.

This will be my third year completing the Hundred Hole Hike. The first year, I did the challenge alone. Last year there were four of us raising money for Down syndrome causes. This year, I want to inspire a small army of people throughout the country to support Down syndrome cognition research by joining me in the Hundred Hole Hike challenge.

I’m asking for your support – either by joining the event yourself or supporting me or one of the other LuMind RDS golfers. We want to raise the the profile of this fun event, part hike, part golf, all for a good cause. Of course, I’d appreciate any help you can give to spread the word on social media sites and to your network. Remember to tag me on Twitter @CrossingGard.

Working with the folks here at LuMind RDS, we decided to challenge 10 people to join me over this summer. It’s part an endurance sport, part fundraiser, and 100% act of love for my son and others with Down syndrome.

100 holes of golf that make a difference. Won’t you join me in golfing for good?

Down Syndrome Cognition Research: THE Most Important Opportunity

by Sarah Wernikoff

Sarah Wernikoff was honored with the Luminary Award at our inaugural recognition gala, the Sky’s the Limit. Sarah chaired the LuMind Foundation Board from 2012-2014 and served as a member of the board for seven years. She presented the following remarks on why LuMind Research Down Syndrome Foundation and Down syndrome cognition research are important to her. Thank you, Sarah, for your continued support and inspiration!

I feel very honored to be acknowledged in this way – particularly at the same event as Dr. Mobley — the original visionary behind this field of research, and Dr. Edgin. It’s only due to their genius, creativity and perseverance that we are all here today. I also want to thank the Whites who had the vision to make this organization possible, and who have done so much for this very important cause over the last decade.  And last, I can’t leave out Carolyn Cronin. The breath of fresh air that is carrying us into the future. Carolyn, thank you for your tireless commitment.

Sarah and Toddler Tate Down syndrome cognition researchIt’s ironic for me to be here in this way with Dr. Mobley, and Patty White, as they are the very two people who I first had contact with 11 years ago soon after my daughter Tate was born in October of 2003.

It’s still hard for me to talk about those early days, …but needless to say learning Tate had Ds was a complete shock to our family. We knew next to nothing about Ds and didn’t know what to expect – all we knew then was that our lives were going to be very different than what we had planned and envisioned.

It was between the shock, and I’ll admit the tears, of those initial few days that my husband Dan and I started thinking about research. What was going on the field of research to help us help assure our daughter would have the very best opportunities in life as possible?  We quickly learned about all of the community, educational, and advocacy resources that had made enormous strides in the past decade or two for people with Ds, and felt very fortunate to benefit from those tremendous efforts and successes……but what about research?

At the time, in 2003, if you went online to search Ds cognition research finding information was like finding a needle in a haystack. So after finding virtually nothing online, Dan and I began to network through Stanford, and Bill — I’m sure you don’t remember this, but I eventually tracked down your contact information and started hounding you (one might even say stalking you, but I will leave those details in the past).  But it was you who put me in touch with Patty who at the time was in the very beginning stages of founding this organization with Jim and the Kafkers in Boston.

So…that’s a long-winded way to tell you all how I got involved, but I tell it for two reasons.Tate Karate

The first is to paint the picture of how far this research has come in the last decade.  Today, in large part due to the work of those in this room, this same Google search results in pages and pages and pages of information and research breakthroughs. It was the goal of the honorees in this room to be a catalyst to cognition research, collaborate with the best and brightest and bring new researchers into the field – and they have done this in an incredibly short amount of time, and on an absolute shoestring budget.

The other reason I share the story is explain how innate and intuitive it was for Dan and I to know that cognition research was THE most important opportunity for our daughter.

When people ask me about my volunteer work and what LuMind is all about, I tell them it supports cognition research for people with Down syndrome. This usually results in blank stares, long pauses and a sense of confusion. Its’ not an easy thing to understand, like cancer research for example.  So I always try to describe it in more familiar terms, like glasses for someone who is visually impaired, or cochlear implants for someone who is hearing impaired.

Tate ChairliftWe are not trying to change anyone — but just turn the dial and move the meter a bit on abilities. The ability to remember. How can you learn if you can’t remember? The ability and speed people with Ds process information. The ability to communicate, and ability to articulate thoughts and feelings.  It’s hard to put it into words, and in some ways you need to know someone with Ds well to understand it, but even small improvements in these areas will have a huge impact. The small improvements will impact the work they do at school, the richness of their friendships, the type of job they will have one day.  It will have a very direct impact on each child’s overall independence as adults, and even more importantly their risk of developing early onset Alzheimer’s disease.

Dan and I are convinced the research, whether results are subtle or significant, will have an enormous impact on Tate’s future. Yes, the years of weekly PT, OT, speech, socials skills therapy, and of course educational support we all give our kids is fundamental to their success, but cognition research, in my book has equal footing — and the potential to be a game changer to the futures of all those with Ds.

So it feels a little awkward to be here receiving an award for this work that is obviously very self-serving. It truly has been a labor of love.

Tate with SiblingsAnd in case you were wondering, I thought I’d close by sharing that we were actually right in 2003 that our lives were going to be different. But what we didn’t know then, was what an overwhelmingly positive different it would be. Tate is the most fun, most loving and sincerely kind person we know. She is the nucleus of our family and it has been an absolute privilege to be her parents. Our goal, as with all of our kids, is for her to live her life to her greatest potential, and I thank all of you in this room for helping us do that.

My Giving Story: We Need Research AND Advocacy

 – Stephanie Hartman shared this story at our inaugural Sky’s the Limit Awards Gala where we honored Dr. Jamie Edgin, Dr. William Mobley, Sarah Wernikoff and Jim and Patty White. Thank you, Stephanie, for supporting LuMind RDS Foundation and for sharing your personal reasons for supporting Down syndrome cognition research. 

By Stephanie Hartman

Stephanie Hartman with TaylorEven from a young age, I knew that I was meant to be a mother. I could see through the experience of others and particularly with the closeness within my family growing up, that good parenting is hard work, but immeasurably rewarding and the most important job to be done.

I became pregnant just before turning 34. My husband Ryan and I learned that our baby boy had heart issues that would require heart surgery in early childhood. We were told that these heart issues were commonly found in children born with Down syndrome, so that was a possibility for our son.

For many reasons, including this, my doctor strongly encouraged that I get an amniocentesis. At that time, it was the only method to determine genetic variances with any certainty.

I was informed that conducting the amniocentesis itself presented a slight risk to my baby. The information would have been helpful for preparation. However, I was unwilling to take the risk.

I viewed this differently than other choices that just affected me. This was a tiny unborn person who only had me to count on to keep him safe and healthy. Also, due to strongly held personal beliefs, I knew that regardless of the results of any test, I was going to give birth to and care for and unconditionally love any child growing inside my body.

In utero, the doctors took measurements of my son’s head, torso, arms and legs. We were told that that our child’s proportions seemed typical and didn’t indicate Down syndrome.

That was enough for us to believe what we thought was ‘’best case” scenario, where our child would have the certain heart defects and require surgery but would otherwise be typical. So we put our heads in the sand and continued our dreams for the future of our family.

Not long after midnight on February 26, 2008, at University Medical Center in Tucson, Taylor Glen Hartman was born.  He was tiny, under six pounds….not the nine pounds that had been predicted. Many things were not as predicted.

Soon after the umbilical cord was cut, I could hear the people in the room whispering to each other. I had never had a baby before but I could tell that something was not right. UMC is a teaching hospital, so the room was filled with interns and residents. After cleaning the baby, one of the doctors explained that our son had features consistent with Down syndrome.

What a strange experience. We shouldn’t have been, but we were stunned.

I was trying to simultaneously process this information that would change the course of my life and manage the political correctness of my reaction, given the room full of strangers witnessing this very personal moment.

The hours and days that followed were the most confusing and challenging I had ever experienced.

The instant and beautiful bond between mother and child shown in the movies was not my experience. I understood though that this tiny gift from God in unexpected wrapping needed me. So through the tears, I snuggled him, I sang to him and I nursed him like our lives and our relationship depended on it. It did.

Meanwhile, Ryan left the hospital. It seemed like he was never coming back.

He finally returned with a gift of tulips and a story about a trip to Holland. He also had information. While I was contemplating how to best support the social and educational components of the future advocacy of our child, Ryan gained comfort, strength and direction, reading the work of Dr. Mobley and others. He quickly absorbed so much about Down syndrome, the details of recent advances, and research underway that would maximize our son’s intellectual capabilities.

Thank goodness for Taylor, he has both of us. My narrow focus on advocacy for acceptance and inclusion would have prevented me from even considering medical cognitive interventions. I feared that in so doing, I was in someway rejecting Taylor or trying to cure his Down syndrome like a sickness.

Taylor Hartman with BrothersWe love our little rascal. Ds is part of what makes him who he is. Ryan and I wouldn’t take away the Down syndrome even if we could. But I now understand that cognition research is about maximizing the potential of individuals living with Down syndrome, not attempting to cure them of it. It is about helping our loved ones to:

  • think more clearly,
  • rest more peacefully,
  • express themselves fully, and
  • be as independent as possible.

Isn’t that what any loving parent wants for his or her child?

If Ryan hadn’t come across the valuable work funded by the LuMind Research Down Syndrome Foundation, we may have focused our attention on advocacy, at the exclusion of research.

Taylor would grow to the age that I am today and suffer from the cognitive degeneration that occurs in Alzheimer’s. If later I learned that I could have taken simple actions today to prevent such an onset, I would never forgive myself.

LuMind Research Down Syndrome Foundation is funding research that is very real, tangible, and applicable sooner than later – for children and adults with Down syndrome.

  • Dr. Jamie Edgin’s sleep and cognition studies provide insight and possible solutions to the sleep-related issues faced by many people with Down syndrome – and their parents!
  • Dr. William Mobley and others are working to help Taylor and others living with Down syndrome to retain the cognitive gains they’ve made through their lives.
  • And thanks to the recent revelation of the connection between Down syndrome and Alzheimer’s, both communities can benefit from the research synergy.  

I know there are many causes looking for answers from research, but unlike federal funding for conditions such as Cystic Fibrosis at over $2500 per affected person, Down syndrome research only receives $60 per person from the National Institutes of Health.

Thanks to the vision of people like Jim and Patty White and the dedicated volunteers, like Sarah Wernikoff, who have supported private funding for cognition research, there have been many recent amazing breakthroughs.

But, we still have so much more work to do. There is fantastic, groundbreaking research waiting to be conducted by these and other distinguished researchers and rising stars. The only barrier today is lack of funding.

Now more than ever I believe that good parenting is the most important job to be done.

I urge you to be as generous as possible to help ignite new discoveries and propel this important research forward. Please join me in one of the most important jobs we can have as parents – supporting the futures of our loved ones with Down syndrome by funding these research advances.

The Sky’s the Limit for Down Syndrome Research!

Almost 100 people enjoyed the events during our “Sky’s the Limit” Awards weekend – a VIP reception, a research presentation by Dr. Harpold, Dr. Mobley, and Dr. Edgin, and of course, the inaugural Awards Gala on Saturday night.

Please enjoy our staff’s casual and candid photos of the Awards gala. We will have more photos and stories to share throughout the week. Thank you to everyone who participated, planned, or supported the event.

A special thank you to photographer Pavel Verbovski for capturing all the wonderful moments from the event. For those wishing to view and purchase professional images from the Gala, please visit the photographer’s website.

There’s still time to show your support with a donation in honor or one of our honorees – Dr. William Mobley, Dr. Jamie Edgin, Sarah Wernikoff, and Jim and Patty White. Select “Sky’s the Limit” when you make a donation and support our inaugural honorees.

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