CHERUBS - The Association of Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Research, Awareness and Support
The Story Behind CHERUBS
Video of Shane Torrence created by his mom
CHERUBS
was created in February, 1995 by Dawn M. Torrence Williamson. Dawn is the mom
of Shane Torrence
(1/28/93-9/11/99), born with left-sided CDH and multiple birth defects.
Immediately she searched for a support group but there were none available
that could help her. After spending hundreds of hours in the hospital's
medical library and finding support only from parents met at the hospital,
Dawn felt a great need for a CDH support group.
With the
help of
Shane's surgeon, Dr. Lesli Taylor, and the support of Shane's father,
Shane's nurses, and friends made at the hospital, CHERUBS was
started.
CHERUBS is founded in memory of, and named for, Preston
Montague and Andrea Jones, two very special CDH babies that were Shane's
hospital roommates, and for all CDH babies that do not survive.
It is
truly a grassroots organization, created when there was
nothing. There was no internet, no other support groups to
turn to or model after. We were just CDH parents trying to make
the world a better place for families like ours. We
started out very small with just a typewriter, kitchen table, $100.00
in
donations, and 2 members. It took us 3 months to figure out how
to
get Non-Profit Status, but we did it! In 1996 we attended our
first
conference- the American Pediatric Surgical Convention in San
Diego.
Finally, the word was out and we started to grow.
We have
organized international CDH conferences, spoken at pediatric surgical
conferences, created 1000's of awareness items, published 3 books,
helped to found ACDHO, started
multiple awareness and fundraising campaigns and run the world's
largest long-term CDH Research Study. Our list of milestones and accomplishments is long - thanks to the tireless and selfless efforts of our many volunteers.
By 2010 we grew to
include over 3000 members from 38 countries and all 50 states, organized
90 volunteers, have been featured in newspaper articles, quoted in magazines,
conduct research, and became the CDH referral center for most hospitals
and other support groups. We still struggle and learn as CHERUBS
grows, but the work is rewarding.
CHERUBS
is run solely
by volunteers. No one is paid for their work with CHERUBS and all
volunteers work around their families and other jobs. CHERUBS
runs
solely on donations but will soon look for grant funding to hire an
in-house
Secretary to help out with the vast amount of work it takes to run
CHERUBS.
Currently, we have only 1 full-time volunteer who works on CHERUBS -
Dawn M. Torrence Williamson, who has given over 25,000 hours of
volunteer time to CHERUBS over the last 15 years in memory of Shane.
Our goal is to not
only help parents of children born with CDH but to lead the medical community
into finding the cause and prevention of this devastating birth defect.
CHERUBS events over the years
Way Back When.....
Written by Dawn Williamson, January, 2010
CHERUBS is almost 15 yrs old. 15 years old in February. Wow! We have
achieved so much over the years. Some parents remember what it was like
to have a CDH child 15 yrs ago - there was NO SUPPORT. No information.
No organizations. No internet. No library books that explained things.
No help from any other organization for birth defects. No nothing. You
were alone, without information, without support, trying to stay afloat
in all the CDH lingo and stress.
When my son was born
the doctors gave me little information. Let's just say his surgeons he
had the first yr of his life did not have very good bed side manners.
Any information that I had, I either learned from the nurses,
respiratory therapists, another CDH mom, neonatalogists or in the
medical library myself. I used to lug a diaper bag around the hospital
- not full of baby supplies because my baby was lying in intensive care
- but full of research articles that I copied out of medical journals
in the library. I was in Duke's medical library so much I had a library
card, knew the staff and knew which computers and copiers worked the
best. Some days that diaper bag would be so full I could barely carry
it. I'd unload the research articles on a tray table beside Shane's
hospital bed, pull out a highlighter and go through each one finding
information.... all while he slept beside me drugged up on Fentanyl or
Morphine or any number of painkillers and sedatives while he was
recuperating from surgery or a complication.
It was in
these medical journal articles that I learned that despite the
surgeon's claims that there was only 1 pediatric trach made in the
entire world and we had to use it, even though it was causing a stoma
so large in my son's throat that you could see his esophagus and we had
to pack and pack gauze in the wound while he cried (under sedation)
because it hurt so bad - that there was indeed more than 1 trach
manufacturer for pediatrics.
It was in these medical
journal articles that I learned that it was completely absurd to use
tissue from a pulmonary sequestration to try to repair a hernia because
NO ONE HAD EVER DONE IT BEFORE... before it had been done on my son,
when I was 19 and he was 3 days old and I didn't know to say no. I
didn't know because I had no information.
It was in
these medical journal articles that I learned that CDH is as common as
cystic fibrosis and spina bifida. I learned about recessive genes and
possible links to CDH. I learned about Cornelia de Lange Syndrome when
the doctors thought Shane might have had it (he didn't). I learned
about using abdominal wall muscle to repair CDH and presented the
surgeons with printed articles when they said I was crazy for
suggesting it.
I learned and I read and I studied and
I learned some more. When Shane came home from the hospital, I
continued to learn and read. I signed up for classes at the local
community college for medical terminology, biology and anatomy so that
I could learn more. I took alternative courses at UNC for genetics and
embryology. I learned what epidemiology was and gained a passion for it.
I
learned to get Shane a new surgeon - and I did and she was and is
amazing, and is still on our Board at CHERUBS, along with many other
surgeons and nurses and epidemiologists that I met in my research over
the years. I am so proud to say that our Medical Advisors and
conference speakers are the best in the world!
I took
all this knowledge... though in the grand scheme of CDH, it's just a
drop in the bucket because no one knows all there is to know about CDH
still.... and together with another CDH mom, started CHERUBS. Not
because we wanted support. Not because we wanted to make our own
cherub's saints or immortalized or put on pedestals. Not because we
wanted recognition or to make friends or be popular... because that's
not our personalities and because that didn't even exist in the days of
writing letters through postal mail. But for 1 reason - because we
didn't want other families to go through CDH alone and without
information.
We met more CDH moms and together we took
our combined knowledge and we compiled CHERUBS Congenital Diaphragmatic
Hernia Research Surveys - by hand. This knowledge bought us to
conferences around the country, bought CHERUBS to the CDH Study Group
table. This knowledge is what created CHERUBS.
This
knowledge is something that parents should have at their disposal
without having to go through all I did to gain it, or all Rhonda did to
gain it. That is what CHERUBS is for.
15 yrs ago there
was no internet. Our organization was started by writing letters,
1000's of letters. You did not get immediate responses like today's
e-mail - you sometimes waited months. You did not have information
within seconds through Google - you drove to a library and you found it
in a book.
12 yrs ago CHERUBS went on-line. Our first
web site was a year later. There was no free web site software, there
was no myspace or facebook. Google wasn't around yet. You had to hand
code html to create a web site. You had to search and search for CDH
families to build an on-line support group. There was no free software
or blogs to help. There were no other support groups to join and learn
from and get members from to start our own. We were pioneers.
We
worked hard. We created our site. We added 100's of pages of
information for CDH families. We lost countless hours with our families
and cherubs to put all the on-line resources together for other CDH
families. We learned what a chatroom was. How to use search engine
optimization. How to install a database. We learned how to create
graphics and a logo and our own site template. We started our listservs
on Yahoo in 1998 and then upgraded to forums, which are safer and more
user friendly. By trial and error, we learned. With no one to teach us,
we learned.
Now, in 2010 there are many support
groups. Anyone who can create a free blog or listserv or Facebook page
and fill out a form on the IRS site with free software can create a
non-profit support group. How amazing it is that so much has changed
and how I wish it had been that easy for us! Now organizations are
taking all CHERUBS has done and our groundwork and building off of
it... furthering our cause. Learning more about CDH. Helping more CDH
families. Some have said that we haven't gone far enough in 15 years -
but we stared with nothing, we laid the foundation, we broke ground -
and we are still working, still building, still doing new things every
year. We are still leading the way and inspiring others.
How far we all have come..... how far CHERUBS and the CDH community has come in 15 years. Happy Birthday CHERUBS!!!!
We will not stop until there is no longer a need for CDH information, support or awareness - because CDH no longer exists.
CHERUBS - The Association of Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Research, Awareness and Support