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The ACR & Simple Tasks Announce First-Ever Rheumatic Disease Awareness Month

Richard Quinn  |  August 17, 2016

RDAMLogo_500x270People have done walks to raise money for systemic lupus erythematosus or run 5Ks to support research on rheumatoid arthritis. But rheumatic diseases, as a whole, have never had a unified national health observance to educate stakeholders: physicians, patients, patient advocacy groups, government, pharmaceutical companies and the public.

Until now.

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September marks the first Rheumatic Disease Awareness Month (RDAM), an initiative crafted by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and its public awareness campaign, Simple Tasks, to bolster public knowledge of lupus, gout and the more than 100 lesser-known conditions that fall under the umbrella term of rheumatic disease. The theme for the month is Hundreds of Diseases. One Voice.

The awareness campaign includes a comprehensive digital toolkit with materials to engage and get stakeholders involved. Some of the materials that are available include: 1) sample press releases that local or regional organizations can use to tout the initiative, 2) tips for contacting lawmakers and 3) materials to help you get involved on social media and in your community.

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To kick off RDAM 2016, the ACR and Simple Tasks engaged actress and arthritis advocate Jennie Garth to film a public service announcement (PSA). As the parent of a child with Still’s disease, Ms. Garth will speak to the struggles of a rheumatic disease patient and the need to raise awareness about lesser known rheumatic diseases. The PSA (see below) will run on national media television outlets beginning in late August and run through September. Other planned engagements include the use of Ms. Garth’s name and likeness on the ACR and Simple Tasks websites during September and at the 2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, use of her name and likeness in the WebMD Arthritis Center and distribution of the PSA on social media channels.

Outreach to patient advocacy groups and like-minded organizations has helped spread the word about RDAM. Some of the resources shared and activities planned through this engagement include the new RDAM digital toolkit, weekly social media topics, weekly Twitter chats (#RheumChat) co-hosted by a different partner organization each week and highlighting one disease each day on social media channels.

Advocacy outreach is also occurring as part of this effort. The ACR is working to secure a mention of RDAM from a legislative champion on the U.S. House or Senate floor while Congress is in session. The goal is to time this mention to occur around the ACR’s September fly-in meetings. Template proclamations have been created and are being sent to state societies for outreach at the local/state level, and media outreach to legislative champions in the U.S. House and Senate is also being performed.

“There are many patient advocacy groups that highlight specific diseases, but for a long time, we have felt that rheumatic diseases as a whole needed to be highlighted, because of the devastating effect they have on patients and [because of] some of the issues [surrounding] patient access to care and treatment,” says Kelly Weselman, MD, chair of the ACR Committee on Communications and Marketing. “Rather than highlighting [the conditions] individually—because they have the common issues that many are difficult to treat, many are difficult to diagnose, they all need the expertise of a rheumatologist to treat them—it was thought that we would increase awareness if we [focused on] this as a group of diseases.”

Dr. Weselman, a practicing rheumatologist at the Wellstar Medical Group in Smyrna, Ga., says that a month-long event is only the first step in putting and keeping rheumatic diseases in the public eye.

“The first step is letting people know, ‘Look, we have all these different rheumatic diseases that share some common threads, but they’re different—and some are common, and some are rare— but they all affect patients, they all cause some degree of long-term disability if not treated appropriately, and many of them require some expensive medicines to treat,’” Dr. Weselman says. “Then, the next step from here will be to make this an annual awareness month, and we can continue to take this further.”

The ACR Board of Directors & Committee Chairs

The ACR Board of Directors & Committee Chairs

The ACR has been working with government officials, physicians and patient advocacy groups to help schedule and promote the month. Now, it’s time to raise more research funding and awareness, Dr. Weselman says.

Imagine, she adds, if the month-long event raises enough awareness for people to realize that the symptoms they’ve been plagued with but aren’t sure why are those of a rheumatic disease. Shortening the time from diagnosis to access to treatment is the awareness program’s long-term goal.

“I don’t think this one month is immediately going to be the solution to the underlying issue,” Dr. Weselman says. “It’s too complex—there are too many diseases and too many issues to discuss—to be finished within one month. But I do think that starting this [event] and continuing [it] annually will help us make great inroads.”

ACR/ARHP members can get involved in a number of different ways this September:

  • Participate on social media. We encourage you to use the official RDAM hashtag, #RDAM, in your social media posts about RDAM 2016. The RDAM toolkit contains several social media posts that you are welcome to use on your social channels. Also, consider changing your social media profile photo to the RDAM profile badge to show solidarity during RDAM 2016 or post a RheumSelfie using #RheumSelfie. Simple Tasks is hosting weekly #RheumChat Twitter chats throughout September on topics related to living with a rheumatic disease. Please join us for one or more of the chats this September! We also ask that you share the Jennie Garth PSA on your social media platforms.
  • Utilize all of the RDAM toolkit materials to promote and engage with others during RDAM and share the toolkit with your patients so they can participate!
    Consider authoring an op-ed or letter-to-editor (or broadcast media interview) about rheumatology diseases as an expert in your community. The ACR is happy to assist you with writing, placement and media outreach. Let Bonny Senkbeil, ACR director of public relations, know about your willingness to participate.


Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.

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Filed under:From the College Tagged with:American College of Rheumatology (ACR)MediaPublic RelationsRheumatic Disease Awareness MonthSimple TasksSocial Media

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