Atlanta Trip Part 1: ASBMR 2016 Advocacy with Soft Bones
This past weekend my daughter Rebekah and I had the honor of traveling to the great city of Atlanta for the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) conference and to visit our dear friends the Gregory family. During our visit we met with several people from Soft Bones, the Patient Advocacy Group for Hypophosphatasia (HPP).
This past weekend my daughter Rebekah and I had the honor of traveling to the great city of Atlanta for the American Society of Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR) conference and to visit our dear friends the Gregory family. During our visit we met with several people from Soft Bones, the Patient Advocacy Group for Hypophosphatasia (HPP).
Mother/Daughter selfie on the plane to Atlanta!
Outside the venue for the ASBMR conference.
A quick "family pic" at the conference.
It was amazing to finally meet in person "the" Sue Krug from Soft Bones.
One of
the main assignments of this weekend was to help support Soft Bones by talking
with doctors and researchers at the Soft Bones booth. During this time of
visiting and participating in staffing the booth I was able to meet and
talk with some of the doctors and researchers that helped to develop Strensiq. Strensiq is the first treatment to ever be approved by the FDA for perinatal onset, infantile
onset, and juvenile onset HPP. It's amazing to see the positive progress in the
patients that are on the medication and see the hope in their eyes!
Got to see the picture of my husband Dave at the booth!
Soft Bones
released a new tool that we were able to promote in the booth to show a
difference between a toddler with HPP and a toddler without HPP as well as the
difference between an adult with HPP and an adult without HPP. It’s an amazing
tool and I loved seeing people’s faces
as they saw the differences in the 3D model. You can check out information
about Soft Bones, Hypophosphatasia, and play with the new tool on the SoftBones website.
HPP toddler interactive tool available on the SoftBones website.
After returning
home from the conference, I realized this weekend helped to fulfill a promise
that I made to my husband 26 years ago when he had his first symptoms of HPP
during our marriage. I told him that someone, somewhere, knew something and
that I was going to do whatever I could to find them and to find something that
would help him. This weekend was the end and the beginning of that
adventure.....
Check back on Monday for part two!



