D.C. visit for ADA advocates

Published 10:38 pm Friday, March 29, 2019

With roughly a month to go before the Hampton Roads Tour de Cure in Suffolk, advocates traveled to the nation’s capital to answer the Call to Congress organized by the American Diabetes Association.

The ADA convenes Call to Congress each spring to gather hundreds of advocates to Washington D.C. to educate Congress members on the impact of diabetes and urge them to assist approximately 30 million Americans that are living with diabetes.

Call to Congress was scheduled Wednesday to Friday this week, starting with a Wednesday meeting between the advocates to discuss the key federal priorities for their meetings in Congress. This included more federal funding for the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the National Diabetes Prevention Program and other diabetes support programs, according to Dr. Maggie Morris Fears, ADA advocate and community leadership board member.

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Then they boarded their buses on Thursday and traveled to Capitol Hill to meet with representatives. Morris Fears and her fellow advocates met with Congressman Bobby Scott, the offices of Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner, and others.

Morris Fears said each meeting was productive, and that each office was supportive of diabetes research and prevention, as well as addressing issues like the rising cost of insulin.

“All of them are on board to support efforts to bring the costs down and understand why the costs have gotten so out of hand so quickly,” she said in a phone interview Thursday evening.

These meetings gave representatives human perspectives on these issues, she said. They were able to listen to these advocates’ personal stories on their diabetes struggles. Some have been diabetic for decades, while others have family with the disease.

“Giving that perspective gives them a tangible story — rather than just ‘insulin is expensive’ — and helps them understand how it’s impacting their constituents,” she said.

But these three days in D.C. are just part of the ADA’s year-round engagement campaign to motivate the nation’s leaders to support and champion critical legislation for individuals that either have or are at risk for diabetes.

Morris Fears encouraged others to reach out to their representatives to keep insulin affordability and the need for more research dollars in public discourse. Every phone call and email provides another piece of evidence for representatives to show how this is affecting their constituents.

“The more noise we make, the more attention that’s drawn to the disease,” she said.

The 2019 Hampton Roads Tour de Cure will be on April 27 at Suffolk Executive Airport, 1200 Gene Bolton Drive. There will be 12-, 30-, 62- and 100-mile routes for cyclists, and also a 5K run and walk.

Registration for cyclists is $20 through March 31 and increases to $25 starting April 1. The fundraising minimum for cyclists is $200. Runners and walkers have a fundraising minimum of $100 and do not pay a registration fee. All participants ages 12 and younger have just a $50 fundraising minimum.

The fundraising goal for this upcoming Tour is $525,000. As of Friday, $220,735.82 has been raised, with 75 teams and 624 total participants registered so far.

For more information on the event, visit diabetes.org/hrtdc or call 424-6662 ext. 3269. Those interested in volunteering can contact Robin Kantor via email at RKantor@diabetes.org.