Florida’s DCF Took Their Children—And the Supreme Court Just Turned Its Back on...
Trump Administration Just Made the Most Significant Drug Policy Change in Decades
Trump's Navy Just Sent a Brutal Message to Iran on the High Seas
Wisconsin's Lt. Governor Vows to Craft State Budgets in Secret If She Succeeds...
Audit Shows Seattle Followed the California Model of Dealing With Homelessness
Detroit Is So Far Gone, Officials Are Begging Criminals Not to Steal These
Not One Democrat Supports Michigan's House Judiciary Committee Efforts to Protect Kids Fro...
A Loophole in Pennsylvania Law Allowed a Registered Sex Offender to Become a...
That Thing That Never Happens Happened Again, and a Mexican National Faces Deportation...
What America Can Learn From Australia About Treating Veterans With MDMA
SPLC, Swalwell, and the War for America's Minds
Tennessee Town Benefits From Strong Gun Industry Protections in State
Chuck Schumer Gets Put in His Place After Claiming Nobody Respects ICE or...
President Trump's Trump Card: Kharg Island
The SPLC Owed Us an Apology -- A Federal Grand Jury Just Handed...
Tipsheet

Melania Trump Holds Roundtable With Sickle Cell Disease Patients as Administration Ramps Up Research

Melania Trump Holds Roundtable With Sickle Cell Disease Patients as Administration Ramps Up Research
Official White House Photo by Andrea Hanks

First Lady Melania Trump held a roundtable to bring awareness to Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) with patients of various ages, advocates, researchers and medical professionals. President Trump formally recognized September as SCD awareness month. The chronic condition affects 100,00 Americans on average per year, and disproportionately affects African and Hispanic-Americans to a higher degree. 

Advertisement

In partnership with the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the administration made finding new treatments, and eventually a cure, for SCD a priority. 

“We have made progress in treating this disease – early identification and new life-saving therapies can help. The President has signed a bill that funds research and treatment, and the Administration has launched a program to provide new training for healthcare workers. But there is still much more to do,” the First Lady said. “Through leadership from HHS and Admiral Giroir, the Administration announced funding to increase the use of recommended medications for children. HHS has also partnered with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to publish the ‘Strategic Plan and Blueprint for Action’ to address Sickle Cell Disease in the United States. And today, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is releasing a new National Sickle Cell Disease Infographic that will provide important information to both doctors and patients and improve the quality of care across the country.”

Advertisement

President Trump signed the “Sickle Cell Disease and Other Heritable Blood Disorders Research, Surveillance, Prevention, and Treatment Act” into law in 2018, authorizing initiatives for SCD prevention treatment and additional research programs. HHS also rolled out the Sickle Cell Disease Training and Mentoring Program (STAMP), which takes aim at giving comprehensive training to primary care providers on SCD evaluation. The administration has turned SCD research into a top-tier priority during President Trump's first term in office, after patients suffering from SCD were previously put on the back burner.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement