File #: 21-5314    Version: 1 Name: Sickle Cell Awareness Month Resolution
Type: Consent Calendar Resolution Status: Approved
File created: 9/16/2021 In control: Miller
On agenda: 9/23/2021 Final action: 9/23/2021
Title: PROPOSED RESOLUTION RECOGNIZING SICKLE CELL AWARENESS MONTH IN COOK COUNTY WHEREAS, the month of September is National Sickle Cell Awareness Month, a month-long initiative designated by Congress to help focus attention on the need for research and treatment of sickle cell disease; and WHEREAS, this year's theme designated by the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America is "Sickle Cell Matters 2021"; and WHEREAS, Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited blood disorder in which red blood cells may become sickle-shaped and harden. For a baby to be born with sickle cell disease, both parents must carry a sickle cell trait or genes. Sickle cell disease is not contagious, and there is no universal cure; and WHEREAS, about 1 in 13 African Americans carry the sickle cell trait, and many do not know they have it, and an estimated 100,000 people in the U.S. have SCD, with approximately 2,000 babies born with SCD annually in the United States; and WHEREAS, people of many ethnic backgroun...
Sponsors: DONNA MILLER, FRANK J. AGUILAR, SCOTT R. BRITTON, JOHN P. DALEY, DENNIS DEER, BRIDGET DEGNEN, BRANDON JOHNSON, BILL LOWRY, STANLEY MOORE, KEVIN B. MORRISON, PETER N. SILVESTRI, LARRY SUFFREDIN, DEBORAH SIMS
title
PROPOSED RESOLUTION

RECOGNIZING SICKLE CELL AWARENESS MONTH IN COOK COUNTY

WHEREAS, the month of September is National Sickle Cell Awareness Month, a month-long initiative designated by Congress to help focus attention on the need for research and treatment of sickle cell disease; and

WHEREAS, this year's theme designated by the Sickle Cell Disease Association of America is "Sickle Cell Matters 2021"; and

WHEREAS, Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited blood disorder in which red blood cells may become sickle-shaped and harden. For a baby to be born with sickle cell disease, both parents must carry a sickle cell trait or genes. Sickle cell disease is not contagious, and there is no universal cure; and

WHEREAS, about 1 in 13 African Americans carry the sickle cell trait, and many do not know they have it, and an estimated 100,000 people in the U.S. have SCD, with approximately 2,000 babies born with SCD annually in the United States; and

WHEREAS, people of many ethnic backgrounds can have SCD, but it disproportionately affects Black and Brown Americans, with an estimated 1 in 365 Black Americans and 1 in 14,000 Hispanic Americans suffering from SCD; and

WHEREAS, Sickle Cell disease leads to complications including chronic severe and unpredictable pain, anemia, frequent infections, swelling in extremities, fatigue, delayed growth and is one of the underlying medical conditions that causes increased risk for severe illness from the virus that causes COVID-19, defined as hospitalization, admission to the ICU, intubation or mechanical ventilation, or death; and

WHEREAS, a recent study by the Medical College of Wisconsin and the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) analyzed COVID-19 cases among a sample of people with SCD who are living in the United States between March 20, 2020, and May 21, 2020, with an average age of 28.6, and reported the following main findings: the majority had one or more SCD-related complications reported in the past....

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