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Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Against the Odds - Living with Trisomy 18

Rebekah celebrated her 3rd birthday on April 21, and she celebrated surrounded by her trisomy family! Thanks to Russ Bowen at ABC's WLOS 13 in Asheville, NC, we were able to share the miracle of her life and the blessing that she is to our family.  We are so very grateful to WLOS for running this Special Report on trisomy 18 and sharing our hope and faith with others! Please grab a tissue before watching and SHARE, SHARE, SHARE!! We want people to know that this is a journey worth walking.  (The direct link to the youtube video is here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5JDrQrwYFY)



The video was taken during the weekend of Rebekah's birthday. We celebrated with 6 trisomy 18  and 1 trisomy 9p friends. We also had the family of a chromosome 2p- (microdeletion), and two families who have lost their trisomy 18 children. Our friends came from SC, FL, and GA.  Below are just a few pictures followed by a link to our facebook birthday bash photo album.

Josiah decided he wants to be a camerman when he grows up!

Beautiful trisomy kids and their mommas

Rebekah showing off her pretty dress and newfound standing skills

Lisa, trisomy mom to Joey, receives a kiss from Kaylen, who has full trisomy 18 and is 11 years old!

There are many more photos to be seen! Please check them out on our birthday facebook album.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Bella Santorum's Impact on the Trisomy 18 Community

I was quoted in an article on Politico on 4/14/12!   Juana Summers (the reporter) did an awesome job of posting a NON-POLITICAL piece by interviewing several different people and perspectives and showing how Rick Santorum's daughter, Bella Santorum, has helped make Trisomy 18 a more widely-known disorder.  Of course, Santorum-haters used the article to attack him, Bella, and trisomy parents, like myself.

Bella Santorum's Fight - By Juana Summers on Politico
Here's my part in the article:
“A couple years ago, nobody knew what trisomy 18 was,” Susan Budd, the mother of a 2-year-old who has the chromosomal abnormality, told POLITICO. “Now, when I’m out and about and when somebody will ask me about my daughter, they’ll see trisomy 18 and they’ll say, ‘Oh, isn’t that what Rick Santorum’s daughter has?’ So Bella Santorum has done a lot for trisomy awareness in a very positive way because I think that more and more people are seeing that children are living with it.”
Budd – a mother of five including 2-year old Rebekah, who also has the disorder – said during her pregnancy several years ago, “if you typed trisomy 18 into Google, everything that you’d pick up would be negative,” but that now – partially thanks to the Santorum family – there’s a greater awareness and more resources for families like hers, impacted by the rare condition.
Without resources to turn to, she started a Facebook group that now boasts nearly 1,000 members and also keeps a blog about her daughter’s life.
“During the pregnancy and early on, my local contacts and my online community - that got me through things,” Budd said. “Now, I’m at the point where Rebekah is fairly healthy and stable, and so I spend a lot of time helping other families that are just beginning this journey, or who have never known that there is a big community to help them.”
Budd’s problem is less common now, after Santorum’s decision to step off the campaign trail – twice – to be with his ailing daughter made national headlines.
Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0412/75120.html#ixzz1tOfQlv5n 


The article made it to another blog where I was re-quoted!
How Bella Santorum Had a Positive Impact on Families With Sick Children by Laura Donovan

I wish I could get our story out there even more and help share HOPE for trisomy kids!

Saturday, March 3, 2012

March is Trisomy Awareness Month!

Rebekah started out Trisomy Awareness Month with two accomplishments! First, she is one of the featured Toby's Kids on the Passy-Muir company website. Rebekah wears a Passy-Muir Speaking Valve which allows her to talk despite having a trach. She also learned something new and very special. When told, "Give me a kiss!", she will now turn her head toward you and give you a nice, slobbery kiss! Every now and then, she makes really funny fish lips trying, but it is mostly a closed lip peck right now. She will even kiss her stuffed animals!! Her nurse, Becky, got teary-eyed when I showed her.


Rebekah turning her head to give mommy a kiss!
Rebekah and I have have kicked off Trisomy Awareness month by trying to do as much local awareness as possible. My boys' school had Disability Awareness Week this week for the 3rd graders. I took Rebekah into the school and was able to share her story and some information about children with disabilities. Her brother, Jeremiah, was so proud when I brought her around to his classroom! He loved showing off her g-tube and trach, and wanted to talk about the SOFT conference we went to last summer in Chicago and how we will be going to St. Louis this summer for it. (SOFT is Support Organization For Trisomy)

Then this afternoon, we had the privilege of having 6 MUSC (Medical University of South Carolina) 3rd year med students/interns come to our house and meet Rebekah and her friend, Maddy, who has a 2q microdeletion. What a WONDERFUL opportunity to work with future doctors so that they can have more compassion and empathy for disabled patients! This is part of a program to give these future doctors some exposure to the disabled community, since most of their exposure will be with sick patients in a 'hostile' environment. I think these poor students got a little more education than they expected. Thanks to the Budd Zoo, they learned how loud and chaotic a house of 5 kids can be!
Maddy (2q microdeletion) and her Mommy, Alisa
Some of the future doctors!
Two more future doctors (holding Rebekah) in front of Jeremiah and Michelle from our local Family Connections group.  A big thanks to Michelle for getting us signed up for this program! We hope to see many more doctors!

This weekend, I will be hard at work on a trisomy awareness video for the nonprofits I am involved in: Hope for Trisomy 18 and 13 and Trisomy Advocacy Group. I am so excited because our video will have examples of trisomy kids from 2 to 22! Woo hoo!  Make sure you subscribe to our you tube channel so you don't miss it! 

Monday, I am attending a SC Department of Disability and Special Needs (DDSN) Stakeholder Meeting. Even though this isn't directly trisomy-related, it is directly related to services we receive from the state and I go representing Rebekah, and all children like her.

Next Wednesday, Rebekah and I are off to FL to celebrate a Trisomy Awareness gathering of friends, several of whom will be at Disney all week thanks to Make a Wish Foundation. We are praying we will get some media coverage for our event!  I am so excited to spend just a few days hanging out with Rebekah's trisomy friends!

Later this month, I will be working hard on a presentation application to the TASH Annual Conference. TASH is an international leader in disability advocacy fighting for human rights and inclusion for people with significant disabilities and support needs - those more vulnerable to segregation, abuse, neglect, and institutionalization.  If the project gets chosen, Rebekah and I will get a trip to CA in November!

Needless to say, I will be taking a mental break in April, and probably sleeping for a week!

To learn about all kinds of helpful resources for special needs children, and to see some of the beautiful children that span across all trisomies, please visit our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/TrisomyAdvocacyGroup

Monday, February 13, 2012

Trisomy 18 Children (and Parents) Can Experience Joy

The following opinion editorial was written by Michael Budd (father to Rebekah) and run in the Greenville News on 2/13/12.



Rick Santorum’s run for the Republican presidential nomination has brought to light a topic that is near and dear to me and my family. Like Sen. Santorum, my daughter has the genetic condition of Trisomy 18, or Edward’s Syndrome.
This condition was prenatally diagnosed, but my wife and I chose to continue the pregnancy despite the gloomy prognosis. Ninety percent of Trisomy 18 children die at or before their birth, and of those that survive, 90 percent die in their first year of life. We chose to cherish whatever life God gave to us.
I recognize that many don’t understand this decision and that there are many misconceptions about these precious children.
Much has been written recently about Trisomy 18, but the most profound statement in an online ABC News article said that survival “depends on the severity of symptoms and the quality of care.” The first part, “severity of symptoms,” is a wide range and something that cannot be changed.
Most of these children are lost despite the hopes and prayers of their parents. However, the “quality of care” is our choice. If the child survives their birth, we have to choose the amount of medical intervention we will afford this medically fragile child.
I have heard it said that Rick Santorum’s daughter, Bella, has received care because he is wealthy and privileged. This is not my experience. My family is middle class, we have private insurance through my employer, and my daughter, Rebekah, has received similar care that Bella has received. Additionally, in South Carolina, Rebekah is eligible for a type of Medicaid called TEFRA, which covers more services than our private insurance.
The truth of the matter is that Bella receives services because Rick and Karen Santorum are willing to fight for them. I did say fight. You see, Trisomy 18 children are categorized as “incompatible with life” or “a lethal diagnosis,” which many doctors and hospitals take as a license to deny care. This story is played out everyday across the United States and the world.
Like the Santorums, we are blessed to live in a community that has hospital systems and many doctors that have helped us address Rebekah’s medical concerns. Their care and interventions have enabled us to enjoy over two- and half-years of joyful life so far.
It is true that a child with Trisomy 18 faces difficult times and their family has to make hard choices about their care, but aren’t all of our lives difficult at times? Many people have told me how Rebekah’s demeanor and activities change when she hears my voice coming into the room. Not only does she recognize me, she is excited to know I am coming to see her!
If you could see Rebekah and Bella (and the numerous other Trisomy children across this country) at home with their siblings, friends (yes, friends) and favorite toys, you would see the true essence of happiness and peace. The joy Rebekah takes from life encourages us about the decisions we have made on her behalf.
My heart breaks every time I hear about a child diagnosed with Trisomy 18, because I know parents will have to make difficult choices in what are often hostile environments. Unless you have faced these choices, you have no idea what they feel like.
At these moments, it doesn’t matter what you believe morally, ethically, politically, philosophically or theologically. You must make a life or death decision. In a few hours, days, or weeks, you will have to make it again. Ultimately, you have to live with whatever choices you made.
For my wife and me, our first choice was to “cherish every kick and every moment” we had with our daughter. Almost three years later I thank God every day for how he has blessed us.
Michael Budd lives in Simpsonville with his wife,
Susan, and their five children.
For more information about Rebekah go to
http://buddzoo.blogspot.com.
Help is available at www.trisomyhelp.org.