This podcast is about the advancement of rare disease research told by health professionals, researchers, parents and advocates. This podcast is for you to learn how newborn screening research saves the lives of babies every day through discoveries of new technologies and treatments. You will hear stories from experts who treat babies, the families who care for them, and the researchers who make it all happen. We are your co-hosts, Drs. Kee Chan and Amy Brower.
We are from the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network (also known NBSTRN). Our work is supported by one of the institutes at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda Maryland called the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (also known as NICHD). Dr. Chan and I are from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (also known as ACMG) and ACMG leads the NBSTRN. Screening babies saves lives every day, and research advances newborn screening by developing new technologies to screen, diagnose and treat. NBSTRN helps accelerate research by creating tools, resources and expertise for researchers, doctors, families, patients and advocates.
To learn how you can help advance newborn research, advocate for rare disease screening and treatment, and learn about important discoveries, become a member of the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network by visiting our website at www.nbstrn.org.
Thank you for listening to this episode of Newborn Screening SPOTlight. If you like our podcast, please subscribe and share an episode with your colleagues, friends, and family.
\Get involved! Stay informed! Help us advance discoveries! Together, let’s increase the impact of newborn screening research by listening to your stories.
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This podcast is about the advancement of rare disease research told by health professionals, researchers, parents and advocates. This podcast is for you to learn how newborn screening research saves the lives of babies every day through discoveries of new technologies and treatments. You will hear stories from experts who treat babies, the families who care for them, and the researchers who make it all happen. We are your co-hosts, Drs. Kee Chan and Amy Brower.
We are from the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network (also known NBSTRN). Our work is supported by one of the institutes at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda Maryland called the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (also known as NICHD). Dr. Chan and I are from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (also known as ACMG) and ACMG leads the NBSTRN. Screening babies saves lives every day, and research advances newborn screening by developing new technologies to screen, diagnose and treat. NBSTRN helps accelerate research by creating tools, resources and expertise for researchers, doctors, families, patients and advocates.
To learn how you can help advance newborn research, advocate for rare disease screening and treatment, and learn about important discoveries, become a member of the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network by visiting our website at www.nbstrn.org.
Thank you for listening to this episode of Newborn Screening SPOTlight. If you like our podcast, please subscribe and share an episode with your colleagues, friends, and family.
\Get involved! Stay informed! Help us advance discoveries! Together, let’s increase the impact of newborn screening research by listening to your stories.
Advocacy Work for Newborn Screening Research and Treatment for Sickle Cell Disease
Newborn Screening SPOTlight Podcast
54 minutes 38 seconds
2 years ago
Advocacy Work for Newborn Screening Research and Treatment for Sickle Cell Disease
Every state screens for sickle cell disease and researchers are working with industry and advocates to develop new ways to improve the health outcomes of individuals living with sickle cell disease.
Today, on the Newborn Screening SPOTlight podcast, we welcome Yvonne Carroll, RN, JD who is trained as a researcher, a lawyer, a nurse, and a patient advocate and is currently the Director of Patient Services in the Department of Hematology at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. She has over two decades of dedicated commitment to advancing the management of care, advocacy work for equitable resources, and community engagement to amplify the voices of patient and families with sickle cell disease.
She sits on several editorial and national boards including the National Black Nurses Association (NBNA) Sickle Cell Sub-Committee, the International Association of Sickle Cell Nurses and Professional Associates (IASCNAPA), and the Sickle Cell Community Consortium Executive Board.
Yvonne been appointed and reappointed as a member of the Tennessee Governor’s Genetic Advisory Committee for more than 15 years, and has been involved in community based participatory research since the beginning of her career, and in 2021, was recognized by American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities (ALSAC), which is the largest healthcare related charity in the United States, with the St. Jude Legacy Award for her lifetime work with the sickle cell community.
Yvonne graduated with a Bachelor of Nursing Degree from the University of Tennessee and a Law degree from the University of Cincinnati. She is a proud veteran of the U.S. Navy, Judge Advocate General Corps, and is a wife, mother, and grandmother. Join us in listening to Yvonne share her passion and inspiring story of hope and vision for newborn screening research in sickle cell disease.
Podcast Interview Questions:
How did you get involve with newborn screening research.
You are currently the Director of Patient Services in the Department of Hematology at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Can you tell our listeners about your role? (Yvonne, you can mention about the St Jude SCRIPP program and listeners can learn more about it here).
You have been funded for sickle cell disease projects for more than 20 years. What areas of research have advanced in sickle cell disease as well as stalled in these past decades? Where do you see the direction of newborn screening research in sickle cell disease in the future?
Your work also involved in engaging and empowering families in decision making process on the management of care for sickle cell disease. What advice do you have for researchers to engage families and advocacy organization to amplify their voices?
You were a part of a group who published a study on “Strategies to increase access to basic sickle cell disease care in low- and middle-income countries”. Can you tell share with our listeners on these helpful strategies needed to increase access to basic SCD care for patients in these settings?
You presented on “Informed Consent for Sickle Cell Disease Gene Therapy Reimagined” at the NBS Research Summit hosted by NBSTRN last September 2022. What are current challenges in consent process? How do you envision the informed consent reimagined?
Are you involved in training the next generation of advocates and nurses, and what do you tell them about newborn screening research? (Yvonne, you can talk about Sickle Cell Nursing Bootcamp and include links and application process).
You are currently on the Steering Committee at NBSTRN. What role do you see NBSTRN play in helping to advance your work and the field of sickle cell diseases?
What does NBS research mean to you?
Newborn Screening SPOTlight Podcast
This podcast is about the advancement of rare disease research told by health professionals, researchers, parents and advocates. This podcast is for you to learn how newborn screening research saves the lives of babies every day through discoveries of new technologies and treatments. You will hear stories from experts who treat babies, the families who care for them, and the researchers who make it all happen. We are your co-hosts, Drs. Kee Chan and Amy Brower.
We are from the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network (also known NBSTRN). Our work is supported by one of the institutes at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda Maryland called the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (also known as NICHD). Dr. Chan and I are from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (also known as ACMG) and ACMG leads the NBSTRN. Screening babies saves lives every day, and research advances newborn screening by developing new technologies to screen, diagnose and treat. NBSTRN helps accelerate research by creating tools, resources and expertise for researchers, doctors, families, patients and advocates.
To learn how you can help advance newborn research, advocate for rare disease screening and treatment, and learn about important discoveries, become a member of the Newborn Screening Translational Research Network by visiting our website at www.nbstrn.org.
Thank you for listening to this episode of Newborn Screening SPOTlight. If you like our podcast, please subscribe and share an episode with your colleagues, friends, and family.
\Get involved! Stay informed! Help us advance discoveries! Together, let’s increase the impact of newborn screening research by listening to your stories.