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New,
Unique, Informational CD Developed by Pittsburgh-Area Man
Now Providing Help to Physicians and Rare Disease Patients
Around the World
CD result of global collaborative effort;
hailed by physicians at several major medical institutions
as a much-needed resource
(Pittsburgh, PA) A Pittsburgh-area man has developed and
published a CD that's now helping patients with autoimmune
disorders around the world find help, information and hope.
Thanks to Ed Becker of Valencia, patients with vasculitis,
Polyarteritis Nodosa (PAN) and other related diseases now
have access to wealth of information that was previously
difficult to uncover.
The CD, which contains an extensive amount of information
and hundreds of Internet resources, was created specifically
for patients and physicians who need more information about
autoimmune disorders but can't easily locate it. Available
since earlier this month, more than 80 CDs have already
been sold. The price is $10 per CD, which covers the cost
of duplication and postage. If not for having to recoup
those costs, says Becker, he'd be happy to just give them
away, knowing that they're helping people.
It's the culmination of seven years of Becker's intense,
self-motivated volunteer efforts following the untimely
death of his mother in 1998 from Polyarteritis Nodosa. At
the time of her diagnosis, doctors told him that the disease
was rare and often fatal if not treated aggressively and
early -- and that not much was known about it. Quickly,
Becker began searching in libraries, bookstores and on the
web for information that might help save her life, but came
up virtually empty handed. Within weeks of her diagnosis,
his mother succumbed to the disease.
A Seven-Year Effort
In his mother's memory and in his free time, Becker -- a
web site designer at Mellon Financial's downtown Pittsburgh
headquarters by day -- created a simple web site on his
home computer. Seated night after night, literally at his
kitchen table, he posted what little information about he'd
been able to glean from his own research into autoimmune
disorders. Soon, the site began attracting patients, their
family members and several medical specialists who, like
him, had been looking, without much success, for more information.
Becker began scheduling weekly online chats, and before
he knew it, his simple web site had evolved into an online
community, with people regularly checking in from around
the world and sharing the bits and pieces of information
they'd been able to uncover about autoimmune diseases. "I
realized the site had taken on a life of its own when prominent
physicians from such institutions as the Mayo Clinic and
Johns Hopkins University Medical Center began to see the
value of such a group," he says. At that point, Becker gave
his initiative a formal name -- the Polyarteritis Nodosa
Research and Support Network (PRSN).
After standing back and realizing how much information he'd
collected about autoimmune disorders, he started discussing
with a member of his community Birgit Wiedenmann-Naujoks,
a multimedia designer in Hamburg, Germany whose mother had
been diagnosed with PAN the possibility of publishing the
information on a CD that anyone could own. They created
a demo version that was released in 2003 in a limited run.
The just-released 2005 version contains much more information,
and may be the most comprehensive resource available for
information about autoimmune disorders.
"It's a true collaborative effort to which many have contributed,"
he says. "From the online community members who have contributed
valuable information to all the physicians who support and
endorse it, to Birgit and me, who had the skills necessary
to create the final product."
Since introducing the initial version of the CD, Becker
has filled more than 100 orders for the CD, and the orders
continue to arrive. He's also talking with libraries and
resource centers about making it available as well. It's
been applauded and endorsed by the medical community and
patients as a comprehensive resource that has long been
needed. Anyone is welcome to order the CD at www.pansupport.org.
Becker also serves as the PRSN Representative on the steering
committee of the newly created Vasculitis Clinical Research
Consortium (VCRC) headed by noted rheumatologist, Dr. Peter
Merkel. Vasculitis is one of about 20 rare autoimmune disorders
addressed by Becker's support network. The VCRC membership
includes highly respected medical experts, mainly rheumatologists,
in the autoimmune disease field, including Gary Hoffman,
MD, of the Cleveland Clinic; Peter Merkel, MD. of Boston
University; John Stone, MD, of Johns Hopkins; and Eric Matteson,
MD. of the Mayo Clinic (who has authored three books on
PAN). The mission of the VCRC is to promote research into
vasculitis by working closely with patient support groups
such as Becker's PRSN.
Becker led a panel discussion on PAN at the 2004 Wegener's
vasculitis conference. Moreover, he has represented his
organization at numerous medical symposiums and conferences.
Most recently he attended a Congressional hearing on increasing
funding for autoimmune disease research in Washington,D.C.
Ed Becker is available to discuss the CD and the mission
and history of the Support Network.
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