Mr. Lewis Goes To Washington
"Today, we need help,"
Lewis tells Senate committee
by Tara Wood
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| MDA National Chairman Jerry Lewis laughs at a remark made by
Benjamin Cumbo during a hearing before the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Labor,
Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies. Cumbo was MDA's
National Goodwill Ambassador in 1996 and 1997. |
On a historic February day for MDA, Jerry Lewis testified to a Senate
subcommittee that, after 50 years of fighting muscular dystrophy, he feels it's
time for the government to step up its role in the battle.
Lewis, MDA's national chairman, urged an increase of $100 million in annual
federal funding for muscular dystrophy research when he and a team of MDA
representatives spoke on Feb. 27 to the Labor, Health and Human Services,
Education and Related Agencies Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations
Committee.
It was Lewis' first-ever appearance before Congress, and the hearing drew some
400 to 500 people, the largest crowd ever to attend a disease-specific hearing
in the nation's capital.
Lewis and MDA representatives told senators that a significant increase is
needed in National Institutes of Health funding devoted to research into nine
forms of muscular dystrophy. The current annual budgeted amount is $19.9
million for muscular dystrophy.
He reminded committee members that MDA has laid the groundwork for testing
potential treatments by locating the genetic causes of almost every form of
muscular dystrophy. But now, much more money is needed to get to the next level
in muscular dystrophy research, he said, and to speed up the clinical trials
process of testing weapons like gene therapy and promising drug treatments.
 |
| Leon Charash (left), MDA Board member and chairman of MDA's
Medical Advisory Committee, described the Association's research
accomplishments to the Senate subcommittee. Also testifying were MDA grantee H.
Lee Sweeney of the University of Pennsylvania and Audrey S. Penn (right) of the
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. Penn is a member of
MDA's Medical Advisory Committee. |
"The clinical trials that we need to conduct to test the things that we think
could stop muscular dystrophy are incredibly expensive. Without government
support, many trials will never happen and those that do will take much
longer," Lewis said. "This is unacceptable. I cannot tell a quarter million
Americans that they are not a national priority."
Lewis urged that millions in NIH funds be granted, not to MDA, but directly to
researchers. He stressed MDA's history of success in pioneering research toward
treatments and cures for muscle-wasting diseases.
"Virtually every major discovery on this disease was funded by MDA. We've
located the genetic defects for almost every form, we've tested countless drugs
and compounds looking for the answer, we've developed techniques that are being
used in the battles against scores of other diseases," Lewis said.
While Lewis was obviously the featured speaker of the hearing, it was
13-year-old Benjamin Cumbo who briefly stole the spotlight and brought the
crowd to its feet with his own question for senators.
 |
| Following the testimony, Jerry Lewis and Sen. Arlen Specter,
R-Pa., the subcommittee chairman, posed for photos. |
Benjamin, of Upper Marlboro, Md., was accompanied by his parents, Benjamin and
Deborah. Lewis showed the panel a video profile of Benjamin, who has Duchenne
muscular dystrophy and who served as MDA's National Goodwill Ambassador in 1996
and 1997.
Subcommittee Chairman Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., asked how he was doing, and
Benjamin responded that he was doing fine and "just trying to find a
girlfriend," listening to hip-hop music and "everything that a teen-age boy
would regularly do."
Then Benjamin, who follows military aviation as a hobby, asked, "If you can
spend $2 billion on a single plane, don't you think you can spend $100 million
on muscular dystrophy?" The question drew a roar of applause, brought many
audience members to their feet and drew smiles from senators.
"Ben, have you considered being a senator?" asked Specter with a chuckle.
Benjamin responded that he was considering a career as a military pilot, and
then Specter said, "We'd better reserve one of those $2 billion planes for
you."
Also testifying on behalf of MDA were Leon I. Charash, chairman of the MDA
Medical Advisory Committee, and Chris Rosa, a member of MDA's National Task
Force on Public Awareness. Both men are members of MDA's Board of Directors.
 |
| MDA Board member Chris Rosa (left) and Donavon Decker, who
received experimental gene therapy in MDA's 1999 trial, testified about the
importance of muscular dystrophy research, and how the disease affects their
lives. |
Charash, a pediatric neurologist from Woodbury, N.Y., told the panel that
there's a great disparity in NIH spending when other diseases are compared to
the muscular dystrophies, which affect some 250,000 American children and
adults.
"In fact, spending on some of these disorders, and even on some that affect far
fewer people, is many times the amount allocated for muscular dystrophy
research," said Charash, who also proposed an NIH study group be established
for neuromuscular disease research.
Rosa, who is affected by Becker muscular dystrophy, told the panel how MDA had
helped him achieve success in his life, and why working toward treatments and
cures is essential.
"Indeed, thanks to MDA, I was able to graduate from college, go on to graduate
school, earn a doctorate in sociology, build a rewarding career and dream of
starting a family of my own," said Rosa, director of the Office of Special
Services for Students with Disabilities at Queens College of the City
University of New York. "Moreover, through MDA's worldwide program of
neuromuscular disease research, we have moved to the very threshold of
treatments and cures.
"While this progress is a source of tremendous hope for families affected by
muscular dystrophy, it is also a source of great tragic irony. As those of us
who have been empowered to pursue independence by research wait desperately for
effective treatments and cures, the ravages of muscular dystrophy continue to
exact tremendous human and social costs," Rosa said.
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| At a press conference following the hearing, Jerry Lewis
addressed the media, as did Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho (left), and Sen. Specter. |
Also testifying at the hearing was Donavon Decker of Huron, S.D., who in 1999
received the first gene therapy injection ever given a person with muscular
dystrophy. Decker, an air traffic controller, has limb-girdle muscular
dystrophy as do several of his siblings.
Decker told the panel that the meager amount of federal money budgeted for
muscular dystrophy research is "very disappointing to myself and my family.
"I am certain that many other families living with muscular dystrophy share my
disappointment. But this can change. We can only win the battle much quicker
with your help," Decker testified.
Some speakers at the hearing, including subcommittee members, praised Lewis for
leading MDA to the height of success over the years.
WHAT'S NEXT?
MDA will be working with senators to develop specific legislation designed to
secure the funding it sought at the hearing, and to make muscular dystrophy
research a priority for our government. Watch Quest and the MDA Web site, www.mda.org, for news about this effort and information on how you
can help by asking your senators and representatives to support such
legislation. |
Specter and Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, praised Lewis for his accomplishments in
the last 50 years, and for all he has done for the country.
Audrey S. Penn, M.D., deputy director of NIH's National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke, recognized MDA for its "tireless efforts
over the years under the leadership of Lewis." Penn is a member of MDA's
Medical Advisory Committee.
At a press conference following the hearing, Lewis described the event as
"absolute proof that this is the best country in the world. For a pratfall
comedian to come before the Senate and ask for your help is an extraordinary
thing."
More information about the hearing,
including complete testimonies (in
text or video) and biographical information
about the speakers who represented MDA, can be found on the Association's Web
site, www.mda.org. |