
Families make emotional plea for diabetes research funding
Families make emotional plea for diabetes research funding
Families and advocates delivered an emotional plea for more diabetes research funding before Congress on Wednesday.
People with type 1 diabetes, including over 160 children, were on hand for a hearing before the Senate Special Committee on Aging.
Those testifying urged lawmakers to extend the Special Diabetes Program, which funds research into type 1 diabetes. The program will run out of funds this September if lawmakers dont act.
The families were joined by actor Paul Sparks, who stars on the Netflix hit "House of Cards."
We are at the cusp of a whole new generation of therapies, devices, and hopefully a cure, Sparks, who was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of 28, told lawmakers.
Thats why we cant let up on research. We need to keep the momentum going by renewing the Special Diabetes Program before it expires at the end of September.
Sparks brought his own family to the hearing to highlight how the disease affects others.
He recalled one night when he turned off a glucose monitor so that his then-pregnant wife could sleep peacefully without any beeping noises. But he awoke to a severely low blood sugar level and a worried wife.
Sparks said that made him realize how important those technologies were and the need to keep research funding.
The Special Diabetes Program was created in 1997to promote efforts to cure and prevent diabetes, a disease that affect millions of Americans.
The program provides $150 million a year to advance type 1 research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and treatment
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