Sickle cell advocate petitions for standardized care

Sickle cell disease

When Atlanta resident Blaze Eppinger has a sickle cell pain crisis bad enough to need emergency room care, he sometimes has to wait hours for treatment.

That’s despite 2014 guidelines from the National Institutes of Health that state medical personnel should “rapidly initiate analgesic therapy within 30 minutes of triage or within 60 minutes of registration.”

Sickle cell gets its name from the way some of a victim’s red blood cells are shaped like crescent moons, or sickles, instead of being round. The rigid, sticky sickle cells become stuck in small blood vessels, slowing or blocking blood flow and oxygen, and causing pain in the chest, joints and bones.

These pain episodes can sometimes be so severe the sufferer has to go to the emergency room for a blood transplant and pain medications.

But, Eppinger said, “As far as adult care, you go into the emergency room, and you wait hours and hours on end. The NIH guideline, that’s not a reality for people living with sickle cell. Somehow, once you turn into an adult, you just turn into this junkie who just shows up for the pain meds. It’s crazy.”

Eppinger, whose job is advocacy and transition assistance at the Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia, has started a petition to change that.

The Change.org petition seeks consistency in treatment that follows the NIH guides.

Marketing consultant Alexis Lott said she’s had the same experience Eppinger described. Although both say care for pediatric sickle cell patients is excellent, “once I transitioned at 18 years old, everything changed,” Lott said.

“One of the first things that happens if you go into the emergency room as (an adult) sickle cell patient is, are you a drug addict? Are you here for the medication? Are you here to, you know, basically get high?” said Lott, who splits her time between Atlanta and Columbus. “That sort of thing is what you get from the not necessarily nurses, but the doctors.”

“That’s everywhere,” Eppinger added. “Advocacy is a big part of what I do here at the Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia, so I have a lot of friends across the United States who have sickle cell, and it’s everywhere. You know, it’s a stigma that they go through.”

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