Building trust
Encounters such as negative emergency department experiences can perpetuate a deeper issue of distrust between those with SCD and the medical community, which originated in long-held, well-documented racial disparities in health care.
“We know historically and even today that there are difficulties facing our families who are impacted by sickle cell disease, and they are related to structural racism and socioeconomic barriers,” Dr. Fasipe explained.
With these issues in mind, she said, “I refer to sickle cell disease as the medical representation of the Black experience in America.” However, she added, the good news is “we are now doing our best now to improve that.”
Among key efforts in building trust is the inclusion of patients with SCD and their families in as many aspects of research and clinical care as possible.
“In the global health care community, it is imperative to invite people with sickle cell disease and from the community to the decision-making table,” she noted.
“Now, when we’re talking about research for therapies, their expectation is that research trials and other initiatives for sickle cell disease must have input from the community; there are no initiatives for sickle cell disease that do not have input from the community.
“The patients and community members may not be experts on the science of sickle cell, but they’re experts on the lived experience and that’s very important when you’re thinking about new bringing in a new therapy.”
Forward momentum
Meanwhile, Dr. Fasipe observed, with the collective, advocacy-driven, forward momentum of the SCD community as a whole, things should only continue to improve.
“Because of the various barriers, some progress may not be immediately around the corner, but I do have confidence that this current generation of children with sickle cell will have improved health equity by the time they reach adulthood,” she said.
“I believe in this future, so I’m doing the work now, and it’s a promise I tell parents: I want your future adult child to live their best life, and we’re working hard to ensure that that becomes their future reality.”
Sickle cell disease awareness
September is National Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute offers a comprehensive website that clinicians can pass along to their patients, with information ranging from fact sheets on the disease and treatments to social media resources and inspiring stories of people with the disease.
In a comment, Lewis Hsu, MD, PhD, chief medical officer of the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America, underscored the uniquely important contributions of people like Dr. Fasipe, in providing inspiration to patients and clinicians alike.
“I have worked with several physicians, nurses, psychologists, and public health specialists who have sickle cell disease,” said Dr. Hsu, who is a pediatric hematologist who also serves as director of the Sickle Cell Center and professor of pediatrics for the University of Illinois at Chicago.
“They are ambassadors who have the trust of both patients and healthcare providers,” Dr. Hsu said.
In addition to providing inspiration of resilience, such care providers can serve as “communication bridges,” he explained.
“When they are conference speakers, everybody wants to hear them; when they sit on advisory committees or focus groups, they can help find the compromise or set the priorities.”
“Their impact on the whole sickle cell community is very large,” Dr. Hsu said.