The power of resilience: overcoming the hurdles of a medical mystery

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Welsh knows this role all too well. After 12 hard-fought years, Welsh remembers the day her daughter finally got a diagnosis. "I was at work when I got the call," says Welsh. "The doctor told me that she had good news and bad news. The good news was they had finally pinpointed the cause of Kylynn's swelling; the bad news was that it was HAE, and at the time there were limited therapeutic options for the disease. Kylynn's diagnosis was such a relief because it meant we finally had an explanation for what had remained a mystery for so long. We finally knew what we were working with."

After Kylynn's diagnosis, Welsh was determined to learn as much as possible about HAE and spread information on the disease to others. She wrote letters and emails to the National Institutes for Health, the National Organization of Rare Disorders (NORD), and the U.S. Hereditary Angioedema Association (HAEA) - the national patient organization for people with HAE - asking for more information and resources on the disease. Welsh knew the more educated she was, the more effective caregiver she could be for her daughter. She also sent information on HAE to her local congressman and to teaching hospitals across the U.S. with the hopes that she could save others from the long road to a diagnosis that she and her daughter had experienced.

Welsh began keeping a detailed history of Kylynn's journey with HAE that included pictures of her after attacks and dates of emergency room visits so she was armed with information at doctor's appointments. She developed brochures about HAE that she distributed to local hospitals, clinicians, and Kylynn's schools. She joined the patient safety board of her local hospital to provide the parent's perspective for the physicians. She even went to her town's local TV and radio stations for Kylynn to do interviews about HAE to help educate the community about a disease most people had never heard of.

"I was determined to spread the word about HAE to every person who may be involved in Kylynn's care," says Welsh. "I provided emergency rooms information about HAE. When people didn't want to listen or didn't believe me when I told them about HAE, I didn't give up."

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