Care2 member?
Log in
Care2 Home
|
Petitionsite Home
|
Browse
|
My petitionsite
|
Create
|
Help
Federal Mesothelioma Research Funding
Target:
U.S. Senate, Appropriations Committee
Sponsored by:
Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation
This Petition calls on Congress to help stop future suffering and death caused by the asbestos-related cancer, mesothelioma, by funding a
National Mesothelioma Research and Treatment Program
.
deadline: 2-4-2006
goal:
10,000
12,480
signatures!
Sign Petition!
see who signed this
log in
This petition has been closed.
see more petitions
Mesothelioma (meso) is an asbestos-related cancer that painfully and aggressively invades the lining of the lungs, abdomen, heart or testicles. For decades, the need to develop treatments for meso was overlooked. As a result, today’s standard treatments usually have only a very limited effect and the average survival time is only 4 to 14 months.
Meso kills thousands of Americans each year, and its incidence is rising. For decades asbestos was used heavily in Navy ships and shipyards, in industrial workplaces, and in the construction of our buildings, schools, and homes. Meso has a long latency (30 years average) and most at risk are millions of U.S. workers and servicemen who were exposed almost daily over long periods of time. When they brought the fibers home each night on their hair, skin and clothes, their wives and children were exposed too.
But even short-term, low exposures can cause the disease, and Americans continue to be put at risk today. The EPA estimates that asbestos is present in as many as 30 million U.S. homes. It still has not been banned in the U.S. and is used in over 3,000 products. Hundreds of tons were released into New York’s air from the collapse of the World Trade Center on 9/11. At least 100,000 firefighters, police officers, rescue workers and New York City residents, workers and school children were likely exposed to dangerous levels.
Experts believe that with appropriate resources, effective means to treat meso, and/or to detect it early and prevent it, are within reach. Currently, there are no federal dollars specifically allocated for meso research, even though one third of meso patients were exposed in U.S. Navy ships and shipyards.
The NMRTP would function primarily through ten meso centers located strategically throughout the country. The NMRTP’s first priority would be to move forward on exciting advances being made in early detection and prevention.
The second priority would be research to improve treatments for, and ultimately cure, mesothelioma. This includes all of the novel surgical, chemotherapeutic, radiation, and biologic strategies now being pursued. It also includes a registry and tissue bank. Unlike most European nations, the U.S. does not maintain a comprehensive registry for mesothelioma as a reportable disease.
The final priority is education. Public awareness of meso must increase. More young investigators and clinicians must be trained. Meso patients, their family members and their local physicians need accessible, up-to-date information on newly available treatments, on managing pain and side effects, and on coping with this cruel disease.
My signature indicates that I support The Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation’s work to establish a National Mesothelioma Research and Treatment Program, federally funded at $30 million per year.
We signed the “Federal Mesothelioma Research Funding” petition!
# 150:
3:07 pm PST, Feb 4,
Howard Goldberg, California
# 149:
3:06 pm PST, Feb 4,
Sally Chaudhuri, New York
# 148:
3:03 pm PST, Feb 4,
Shirley McLARTY, New York
# 147:
3:01 pm PST, Feb 4,
Barbara B. Hyland, Florida
# 146:
3:00 pm PST, Feb 4,
Kristin Burns, Colorado
# 145:
3:00 pm PST, Feb 4,
Jack Drapacz, New York
# 144:
3:00 pm PST, Feb 4,
Terri Anderson, Arizona
# 143:
2:58 pm PST, Feb 4,
Jean Ainsworth, Florida
# 142:
2:56 pm PST, Feb 4,
Beverly Lassiter, Nevada
# 141:
2:49 pm PST, Feb 4,
Anne McConnell, Nevada
# 140:
2:48 pm PST, Feb 4,
Lynne Allgaier, Connecticut
# 139:
2:44 pm PST, Feb 4,
Name not displayed, Washington
# 138:
2:43 pm PST, Feb 4,
Colleen Carter, Texas
# 137:
2:35 pm PST, Feb 4,
T HARPER, Texas
# 136:
2:35 pm PST, Feb 4,
Kathleen Baker, Illinois
# 135:
2:32 pm PST, Feb 4,
Michael Law, California
# 134:
2:30 pm PST, Feb 4,
Janet Robertson, California
# 133:
2:28 pm PST, Feb 4,
Jim Lewis, Colorado
# 132:
2:28 pm PST, Feb 4,
Bonnie L. Lee, Washington
# 131:
2:27 pm PST, Feb 4,
Rick Collins, California
# 130:
2:26 pm PST, Feb 4,
Stephanie Beaver, Colorado
# 129:
2:26 pm PST, Feb 4,
Linda Shaevitz, California
# 128:
2:25 pm PST, Feb 4,
Erika Brauch, California
# 126:
2:23 pm PST, Feb 4,
Cheryl Kraft, Oregon
# 125:
2:19 pm PST, Feb 4,
Judy Berglund, Minnesota
# 124:
2:17 pm PST, Feb 4,
Carol A. Penney, California
# 123:
2:17 pm PST, Feb 4,
Chrystal Kennelly, California
# 122:
2:17 pm PST, Feb 4,
Harold A. Larson, Nevada
# 121:
2:16 pm PST, Feb 4,
Pamela Rigg, California
# 120:
2:15 pm PST, Feb 4,
Name not displayed, Nevada
# 119:
2:14 pm PST, Feb 4,
Teresa J. Coppa, Rhode Island
# 118:
2:13 pm PST, Feb 4,
Jean Carroll, Oregon
# 117:
2:10 pm PST, Feb 4,
Heidi Pellegrini, New York
# 116:
2:09 pm PST, Feb 4,
Christopher Ross, Vermont
# 115:
2:08 pm PST, Feb 4,
Jessica Denning, California
# 114:
2:06 pm PST, Feb 4,
Sondra Koch, Oregon
# 113:
2:02 pm PST, Feb 4,
William J. Haring, Minnesota
# 112:
2:01 pm PST, Feb 4,
Carol Guevarra, Florida
# 111:
2:00 pm PST, Feb 4,
Name not displayed, Texas
# 110:
2:00 pm PST, Feb 4,
LARICE ADDAMO, New York
# 109:
2:00 pm PST, Feb 4,
Maureen Nalle, Tennessee
# 108:
1:57 pm PST, Feb 4,
Mary S. Alfson, Pennsylvania
# 107:
1:56 pm PST, Feb 4,
Lisa Savino, Michigan
# 106:
1:55 pm PST, Feb 4,
Charles Barber, Washington
# 105:
1:55 pm PST, Feb 4,
Thomas Tierney, New York
# 104:
1:55 pm PST, Feb 4,
Kim Farmer, Washington D.C.
# 103:
1:54 pm PST, Feb 4,
Ed Lynch, Minnesota
# 102:
1:53 pm PST, Feb 4,
Marci Dahms, Colorado
# 101:
1:53 pm PST, Feb 4,
Helene MacLaughlin, Pennsylvania
View Signatures:
|<
<
12,486
12,450
12,400
...
250
200
150
100
50
>
>|