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Lupus 'warrior' and advocate encourages awareness of disease

World Lupus Day is May 10, drawing attention to the chronic autoimmune disease that is known as 'the disease with a thousand faces'
2020-04-03 Lupus Ontario Group Photo
May 10 is World Lupus Day.

NEWS RELEASE
LUPUS ONTARIO
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“I remember it like it was yesterday, not back in 2010. A beautiful September day. ‘I don’t know how to say this, exactly, but you have lupus,’ my doctor informed me. It had taken years — years — to be able to finally have a diagnosis of symptoms that could have been explained away by any part of my made-for-TV-movie kind o’ life: extreme fatigue (the ‘bone-crushing’ type), deep pain in my muscles and joints. I was 36, working full time, and a mother of five. Of course, I was fatigued. Of course, I was exhausted.”

Brynn Clark has become a lupus warrior and advocate in the years since her diagnosis, hoping to bring awareness to this autoimmune disease, and encourage people not to dismiss their symptoms.

Lupus is a chronic, complex autoimmune disease that affects at least five million people worldwide. More than 90 per cent of people with lupus are women; lupus most often strikes during the childbearing years of 15 to 45. Black, Latinx, Asian and Indigenous people are two to three times at greater risk than Caucasians.

In lupus, the immune system, which is designed to protect against infection, creates antibodies that can attack any part of the body including the kidneys, brain, heart, lungs, blood, skin, and joints.

“For me, lupus means the full ‘systemic lupus erythematosus.’ I have had three cardiac infarctions. I have kidney damage. I have had pleurisy,” Brynn recounts on how difficult it has been to have her body fight against itself daily.

Lupus is a serious autoimmune disease, which means your immune system attacks healthy cells by mistake. It’s also chronic, meaning it lasts a long time and requires long-term treatment.

Lupus is one of the most complex autoimmune diseases there is. It affects each person differently with symptoms that are sometimes hard to detect and differ from patient to patient, which is why it is called “the disease with a thousand faces.” This makes the disease hard to diagnose and arriving at effective treatments very challenging.

For the vast majority of people going through life with lupus, effective treatment can reduce symptoms, reduce inflammation, and maintain normal bodily functions. It is therefore critical to understand and manage symptoms.

May 10 is Lupus Awareness Day, which serves to call attention to the impact that lupus has on people around the world. Lupus Ontario is joining groups from around the world that have united to lead the annual World Lupus Day observance on May 10.

Now in its 19th year, World Lupus Day will focus on the need for heightened public awareness of lupus, improved patient health-care services, increased research into the causes of and desperately needed treatments for lupus, enhanced physician diagnosis of lupus, and better epidemiological data on lupus globally.

Lupus affects more than just the person with the disease — it also impacts their family, friends, and work colleagues. Still, it is widely under-recognized as a global health problem by the public, health professionals, and governments, driving the need for greater awareness. Early recognition, diagnosis and treatment of lupus help to slow the debilitating effects of the disease. However, lupus is often difficult to diagnose because symptoms frequently mimic common illnesses. Increasing awareness of lupus will save lives.

Brynn shares that “what I needed in the start of my lupus journey was to find somewhere to read about other patients’ experience with lupus.

“What I did was start a blog, Lupus Interrupted. It was meant as a place to share my journey for family and friends. My family didn’t read it. Who read it? People from all over the world who wanted a real conversation about what it is like living with this disease," said Brynn. 

"I wrote to become a patient advocate. I wrote to highlight a lupus journey filled with hardships, but rife with positive actions. I wrote for Stanford University’s medical blog, Scope, to illustrate to new doctors what living with lupus really feels like.”

Lupus Ontario is the largest Canadian provincial organization focused on improving the lives of lupus patients and their families. Lupus Ontario’s mission is to provide vital support, education, awareness, advocacy and research through the fundraising efforts of our staff and volunteer community to help those with lupus live longer, healthier and better lives.

Brynn Clark joined Lupus Ontario as a volunteer and board member to continue her impact of advocacy.

“I didn’t like the hand I’d been dealt in life, so I changed the game. My epiphany came when I realized that at the end of the day, it’s only my choices that will determine whether this life will be remembered and measured in pain, or in memories,” says Brynn.

“I am an on-my-own mother of five, managing the best that I can with what I’ve been given. My wish for my children is that they be educated on patient rights, and compassionate to the journey of others, no matter their circumstance or afflictions."

Join Lupus Ontario’s effort to increase public awareness and understanding of lupus by promoting the annual World Lupus Day observation in your community.

— Written by Lisa Bilodeau, board member, Lupus Ontario

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