Wednesday, December 10, 2003

Help Support Fibroid Research & Education

[please feel free to forward this to your friends and family, with whatever modifications you would like to make.]

I wanted to ask you to please contact your representatives to the House and Senate and ask them to support the Uterine Fibroid Research and Education Act of 2003 (House Bill H.R.2157, Senate Bill S.1087). These are both still in the Health subcommittees but it would be
great if more women would write in.

Uterine fibroids, non-cancerous tumors of the uterus, affect between 25% and 80% of women and can cause symptoms that may include: excessive bleeding leading to anemia, infertility, and put pressure on the bladder, urethra, intestines.

From the Senate testimony given last Spring by Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski (with Senator Hillary Clinton of New York):

"Despite their prevalence, little is known about uterine fibroids, and few good treatment options are available to women who suffer from them. Right now, hysterectomy--the surgical removal of the uterus--is the most common treatment for uterine fibroids. More than 200,000 women undergo a hysterectomy each year to treat their uterine fibroids, which requires a six week recovery, has a 20 to 40 percent
risk of complications, and means a women can no longer bear children. Less invasive treatment options, like drug regimes or fibroid embolyzation, are promising, but many have not undergone the rigorous testing that women expect. In fact, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality at the Department of Health and Human Services
found 'a remarkable lack of high quality evidence supporting the effectiveness of most interventions for symptomatic fibroids.'

Women deserve better. That's why I am introducing the uterine Fibroid Research and Education Act--to find new and better ways to treat or even cure uterine fibroids.

This bill does three things. First, it expands research at the National Institutes of Health, NIH, by doubling funding for uterine fibroids every year for the next five years. Despite a budget of over $27 billion, NIH spent just $5 million on uterine fibroids research in 2002. This legislation authorizes $50 million over five years to provide the investment needed to jumpstart basic research and lay the
groundwork to find a cure.

This additional funding will help researchers find out why so many women get uterine fibroids, why African American women are disproportionately affected, what tests women can take to prevent uterine fibroids, and what are the best ways to treat them."


The research they might be able to do if this is approved could help other reproductive and gynecological conditions as well. At the very least it would help make sure women are given other options before hysterectomy.

Find your representatives here:

http://www.senate.gov/
http://www.house.gov/

To learn more about uterine fibroids, visit the National Uterine Fibroid Foundation website: http://www.nuff.org/health_statistics.htm

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