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We want to hear your IBD story
Do you have a story you feel needs to be shared with our community?
Ben's Story
I was cooking dinner for my pregnant wife when I started to feel progressively light-headed. I told my wife that we should go to urgent care, then collapsed on the kitchen floor. As I regained consciousness, I knew immediately that my Crohn’s disease was back. As a dad-to-be, my initial thought was, “I’m about to have a baby – I need to get better now!” But I didn’t get better quickly, because ultimately insurance-mandated step therapy stood in my way.
Barbarann's Story
Like many inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients, my life has been like a roller coaster ride. I am grateful to have a loving, calm husband who has helped me roll with the downs and embrace the ups. Rolling with it got a lot harder recently when my insurer said they would not pay for the medication that was working for me unless I tried and failed on one of their recommended treatments first, a process they call step therapy.
Advocacy story
Ariel's Story
I was looking forward to the challenge and excitement of starting medical school in a new city. But soon after I arrived in Atlanta, my insurer said they would no longer pay for the oral drug that kept my ulcerative colitis under control. Instead of attending lectures and making new friends, I spent the first year of med school isolated and in pain, trying and failing medications that my insurer insisted I take first — a process called step therapy.
Advocacy story
Amber & Ethan Downs' Story
When Ethan was nine years old, he lost 15 pounds in two weeks. He was in excruciating pain and couldn’t keep any food down. I felt so frustrated and angry that we didn’t know what was wrong and I couldn’t help him. When Ethan was finally diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, I thought things would get better. But instead, insurance-mandated step therapy prevented Ethan from getting the treatment that could ease his suffering.
Patient story
Chad’s Story
When he was nine years old, Chad experienced horrible symptoms that led to his hospitalization and a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis. The experience was traumatic, isolating, and made Chad feel lonely. But through Camp Oasis, our co-ed residential camp exclusively for kids with IBD, he found himself in the one place where other kids understood his struggle. When his mom picked him up, she found Chad in tears, because he was so sad to leave. Your ongoing support will help other kids like Chad have great experiences at Camp Oasis.
Patient story
Ayla’s Story
Ayla is one of the youngest patients we’ve ever seen. Her parents needed to change her diaper at least 15 times a day when she was only three months old. Early in her life, she could only consume her food through a tube in her stomach and had to visit the hospital every seven weeks to have an IV infusion. But thanks to your support, today she is 10 years old, and her disease is largely in remission. Instead of spending time in the hospital, she loves to dance. “It makes me so happy,” she told us. “And it allows my mind to go somewhere else when things have been stressful.”
Patient story
Michael’s Story
Michael has endured 16 expensive surgeries, losing most of his intestines, and has spent up to 12 hours a day hooked up to an IV just to get nutrition since he was first diagnosed with Crohn’s disease at age 11. But thanks to the support he has received from the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation and his friends and family, he is much better now after receiving an intestinal transplant. Your support today will help us offer support to other children and their families.
Clinician story
Dr. Abraham's Story
Patient story
Alicia's Story
When I was diagnosed with IBD in 2004 I had only just briefly began to navigate my own sexuality. The summer I was diagnosed with ulcerative colitis was right before I was meant to start high school. I ended up starting with a 6 month delay due to complications that resulted in emergent surgery and a hefty rehabilitation period. Not only did I have to navigate a shiny new diagnosis and an ostomy bag at the age of 14, but I was also wading through the confusion about my sexuality on top of that.
Patient story
Isabelle's Story
Patients with Crohn's disease may experience debilitating pain and fatigue in addition to other symptoms. Isabelle shares her story about learning to manage pain, stress, and fatigue while battling IBD as a student.