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Global SDS Awareness Day and Action Week

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​What's Global SDS Awareness Day & Action Week?

 

Global SDS Awareness Day and Action Week is about coming together and raising awareness as a united global patient community.

In 2020, the SDS Alliance reached out to all the international SDS patient organizations to discuss the idea of creating an annual Global SDS Awareness event, proposing a time in spring or fall to avoid the busy winter holiday and summer vacation seasons. Our colleagues at SDS UK proposed late April as the time to coincide with Dr. Shwachman's birthday. All organizations that responded - including SDS UK, SDS Netherlands, and SDS Foundation (US) - supported this concept and timing, and so Global SDS Awareness Week was born.

Over the years, the event has not reached its full potential, so we set out to reconsider the date. We polled the international patient community for a new date/frame preference. You voted and we listened!

​Based on your feedback, the new date(s) are:

 

Global SDS Awareness Day is November 7th

 

and leading up to it,

Global SDS ACTION Week is November 1-7th

SDS Awareness Day Week Month cartoon graphic with a globe in the background and a woman with long brown hair speaking into a megaphone.

Take Action to Make an Impact!

Here is a list of simple actions you can take, one or two a day during Global SDS Action Week - or anytime throughout the year. Click on the list to download a PDF with clickable links. How will you take action this year?

SHWACHMAN-DIAMOND SYNDROME ALLIANCE Global SDS Awareness Day & Action Week. Graphic inspired by the classic 7-Eleven logo and representing November 7. The 7 also symbolizes a ribbon for awareness. Global SDS Awareness day & action week, www.sdsalliance.org; A graphic representing a checklist ACTIONS FOR IMPACT: Joined SDS-GPS to drive research; Shared info on US ICD-10 code for SDS (D61.02) with my providers; Joined the SDS Alliance Mailing List and Global Network; Became a monthly sustainer / donor to a patient advocacy organization; Updated my registry info and/or shared a biosample (BMB); Learned about SDS research: SDS POPS or SDS Alliance blog; Donated to or fundraised to accelerate SDS therapies; Stepped up at the Million Steps Closer annual fundraiser; Built connections with and welcomed new SDS community members; Shared my SDS story on social media, meetings, or blog; Volunteered or offered my help at an SDS nonprofit; Shared my voice through a vocal video; Shared SDS informati

New!
Share a vocal video!

We partnered with Vocal Video to bring you a super easy way to share your voice by answering a few simple questions. Here is Eszter's example. Click here or below to share your voice, today!

We will use your videos to raise awareness about SDS and to inform our programs to best support your needs!

​​Why November?

 

Dr. Shwachman was a prominent gastroenterologist in Boston in the 1960s and developed deep expertise in caring for Cystic Fibrosis (CF) patients and "atypical" CF patients. This was before SDS was recognized as a distinct disorder, and many patients were categorized as "atypical CF." Drs. Shwachman and Diamond, as well as Dr. Bodian, were instrumental in defining Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome. A landmark publication in the journal Pediatrics in 1964, entitled "The Syndrome of Pancreatic Insufficiency and Bone Marrow Dysfunction" was published by Drs. Shwachman and Diamond in November 1964. It is due to this publication that the disease received its name, "Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome". About 40 years later, Dr. Johanna Rommens and her team at SickKids in Toronto, Canada, identified the main gene responsible for SDS. The gene (and corresponding protein) was named SBDS for Shwachman-Bodian-Diamond Syndrome to acknowledge Dr. Bodian's contribution to the field. Coincidentally, the SBDS gene happens to be located on section 11 or Chromosome 7, giving a nod to the date of 11.7 or November 7.

A graphic showing three researchers physicians after whom Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome was named: Dr. Harry Shwachman, Dr. Louise Diamond, and Dr. Martin Bodian. SDS stands for Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome. The B in SBDS gene represents Dr. Bodian.

Why participate?

It is our hope that more and more organizations and families will participate over time so that this campaign can grow and reach more families, medical providers, and researchers. We have reached out to all international SDS patient groups to invite them.

Raising awareness can save lives. Any diagnosis made sooner lessens the burden and suffering of the diagnostic odyssey, and life-saving interventions can begin sooner. The SDS community can grow to support more targeted research, accelerating the pace toward therapies and cures.

Additional ideas to take action

 

Both patient advocacy groups AND individual patients and families are invited to host events in their communities, be it a bake sale, gala, golf tournament, walk, or any event that works for you and your community. Let us know if we can help in any way! We would love to post your events below and help spread the word.

If you have questions about any particular event or campaign, please reach out to the hosting organization or family directly. Donations to any of the participating SDS organizations are always welcome and appreciated. Visit their respective websites for details.

If you are an SDS patient or family looking for peer-to-peer support or local support organizations, please check out the list on the SDS Alliance website, here. General information about SDS for patients and families can be found here

New T-shirt Designs Now Live!

 
Click on the design to order.
 
  • Multiple colors and styles are available, including t-shirts, hoodies, and tank tops.

  • International shipping is available.

  • If you would like to have them printed locally in your country or community, email us at connect@sdsalliance.org and we will be happy to share the design file!

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SDS Story Series

Huge thanks to all the SDS families from around the world for sharing their stories!

 

The stories are available on the SDS Alliance social media channels:

20210403 Share Your Story graphic with a speech bubble in the fron with the words Share your SDS Stories and read others'; and a globe with many speech bubbles in the background.

To raise awareness about SDS as part of the Global SDS Awareness Week in 2021, the SDS Alliance is launching a series of SDS Stories on all it's website, Facebook, and Twitter. We are looking for stories from around the world, the good, the bad, and the ugly :). We want to raise awareness that SDS manifests itself and impacts families in a wide variety of ways, so that more patients can be diagnosed sooner and benefit from community support and better treatments. We also want to show the world that the SDS community is strong and worthy of investment into new therapies and cures. Join us by sharing YOUR story. 

Visit our Patient Stories page, contact the SDS Alliance on Facebook or email us at connect@SDSAlliance.org

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