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GSF’s Fundraising Campaign for Gene Therapy Research Reaches Milestone


This summer, FightSMA and the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation (GSF) partnered in an effort to raise funding for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) gene therapy research.

GSF’s goal is to raise $200,000 before the end of 2010. Today, they announced that they have reached the halfway mark.

From GSF:

GSF $200 for SMA badgeLess than TWO months after launching our “$200K For SMA” fundraising campaign in support of promising SMA focused gene therapy research at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and The Ohio State University, friends, families, colleagues, coworkers, communities, and total strangers across the country - some impacted by SMA and many not - have come together to organize and execute an impressive laundry list of wonderful fundraisers totaling over - DRUM ROLL PLEASE - One Hundred Thousand Dollars. That’s right. $100,000!!! In…just…TWO…months.

There’s just no other way to say it - what’s happening here is incredible, inspiring, and humbling. And we are personally honored to be part of all of this positivity - it fuels us to push forward and do more. At our core, we’ve always believed in the power of the individual. And as individuals, if we collectively work together in a positive, productive fashion, we can have an enormous impact and change the status quo.

Click here to read the full announcement.

A huge “THANK YOU!” goes out to everyone who has been involved in raising funds for GSF’s “$200K for SMA” (read the list here) and FightSMA’s “Realizing the Dream” - campaigns worked together towards the same goal: to bring SMA gene therapy to clinical trial.

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Moving the campaign forward


FightSMA is proud to have received $8,000 to support the “Realizing the Dream” campaign from two private foundations. The contributions were at the recommendation of individuals who champion FightSMA’s mission to accelerate the search for a treatment and cure for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).

Requesting gifts from a foundation or organization or from a friend or relation is one way that supporters of the SMA community are channeling funding to SMA research. (Learn more about how to do this by clicking here.) But, for those who find this fundraising avenue to be inaccessible, there are other tools. These are just a few.

  • Fighter Mom™ Manual - The Fighter Mom™ manual is a guide and reference tool to help mothers (and others) take on the challenge of “doing something” after they’ve discovered their child, grandchild, niece, nephew or special child in their life is battling any chronic and possibly life-threatening disease.
  • Firstgiving - Firstgiving allows you to create a personal webpage to raise funds for FightSMA (listed as “Andrew’s Buddies Corporation”). Set a fundraising goal and then tell your friends and family by adding a link in your emails, website, blog, or social networking site.
  • Causes - Are you a member of Facebook? If so, join the FightSMA (Andrew’s Buddies) Cause and you can use it to tell your friends about the “Realizing the Dream” campaign and engage them in efforts to collect donation for the fundraising project. (Have a birthday coming up? Use Causes to make a birthday wish for gene therapy.)
  • GoodSearch and GoodShop - GoodSearch enables you to raise funds through the simple act of searching the Internet. Start your online shopping at GoodShop or download the toolbar and a percentage of what you spend will be donated to FightSMA at no extra cost to you!

To learn more about spinal muscular atrophy, the promise for SMA gene therapy, and the “Realizing the Dream” campaign, visit www.FightSMA.org.

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FightSMA Launches Gene Therapy Fundraising Campaign: “Realizing the Dream”


Gwendolyn Strong Foundation Is Campaign Partner

RICHMOND, VA - Richmond-based FightSMA announced today a new fundraising campaign for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) gene therapy, “Realizing the Dream.” FightSMA is collaborating with the Santa Barbara–based Gwendolyn Strong Foundation, to form a bi-coastal partnership with a common goal: to bring SMA gene therapy to clinical trial.

“Ten years ago, it would have been unheard of to say scientists were approaching a treatment or cure for spinal muscular atrophy,” said FightSMA President Martha Slay. “Today, the dream is being realized in some of the most prestigious labs across the country. Never before has there been such promise for SMA gene therapy.”

Dr. Brian KasparBeginning now and for the next three years, families and groups in the SMA community will raise funds to build a safe foundation, deliver genes to an SMA model, and produce adequate vector (gene delivery) supply. These efforts will support Dr. Brian Kaspar (pictured left) of Nationwide Children’s Hospital and The Ohio State University and other collaborating scientists.

FightSMA, working with the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation, a funding source for critical SMA science and awareness initiatives, invites the SMA community to make a decade-old dream come true. “Our SMA gene therapy program at Nationwide Children’s Hospital and the Ohio State University continues to show great promise for treating SMA patients,” said Dr. Kaspar.

FightSMA’s objective for the balance of 2010 is to complete funding for Phase One and for Year-One of Phase Two of the research program. “The first objective is to build a solid foundation of safety and to eliminate toxicity,” said Dr. Chris Lorson, FightSMA Science Director. Additionally, FightSMA plans to raise another $250,000 to fund the first year of Phase Two (Delivery & Efficacy). The “Realizing the Dream” program will be accomplished through a series of campaigns. Completing these two Phases will bring SMA gene therapy significantly closer to clinical trial.

FightSMA has been instrumental in helping to develop a gene therapy strategy to cure spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), including oligonucleotides and gene replacement vectors. The strides that SMA researchers have made in the gene therapy arena have provided insights into a range of genetic disorders, including other neurodegenerative disease (ALS/Lou Gehrig’s disease, myotonic dystrophy, Huntington disease) and other diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

For more information on the FightSMA-Gwendolyn Strong Foundation partnership and “Realizing the Dream” campaign, visit www.fighsma.org or call 804-515-0080.

FightSMA was created to strategically accelerate the search for a treatment and cure for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), the number-one inherited cause of infant death. The organization pursues this objective by raising awareness and funding for SMA research.

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Stop SMA Fights for Pepsi Refresh Funding


Evie Horton

After their daughter Evie was diagnosed with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), Jeff and Dee Horton perceived a lack of knowledge and awareness of SMA in their community and even among many doctors. Desiring to do everything in their power to help Evie and others like her, the Hortons founded Stop SMA, a non-profit dedicated to battling SMA.

Now, Stop SMA is in the running to raise $250,000 for SMA research through the Pepsi Refresh Project. As of today, Stop SMA sits in 4th place among $250,000 candidates, but they need to be one of the top two when the end of the month rolls around to qualify for funding. Supporters can help move Stop SMA up the list by voting each day in March and asking their friends and family to do the same.

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Last Day to Vote for SMA Research

Posted on January 22, 2010 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Families and Friends


Chase Community Giving

Today, Friday, January 22nd, is the last day to cast your vote in support of Spinal Muscular Atrophy research in the Chase Community Giving campaign on Facebook.

The charity that receives the most votes will win the top prize of $1 Million and five runners-up will get $100,000 each. The Gwendolyn Strong Foundation (GSF) is trying hard to hold on to 6th place - a $100,000 eligible position.

GSF has pledge to give 100% to SMA awareness and research deemed most promising by the SMA community. Within 90 days after winning the Chase Community Giving prize, GSF will execute a unique online voting campaign and distribute all funds to the winning programs recommended by prominent and committed SMA scientists and voted most important by the SMA community. Thanks to the first round of voting, the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation (GSF) won $25,000 which has already been distributed to research.

You can only vote for the GSF once, so in order for SMA to have a chance at this critical funding, we need you to not only vote on Facebook, but get your friends and family involved as well.

Go to http://VoteForSMA.com to vote and to learn more.

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Vote for SMA Research


Chase Community Giving

Thanks to previous votes, the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation (GSF) won $25,000 for Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) research in the Chase Community Giving campaign on Facebook. Now, for only one week from January 15th to January 22nd, SMA has an opportunity to win much, much more!

The charity that receives the most votes will win the top prize of $1 Million and five runners-up will get $100,000 each. GSF has pledge to give 100% to SMA awareness and research deemed most promising by the SMA community. Within 90 days after winning the Chase Community Giving prize, GSF will execute a unique online voting campaign and distribute all funds to the winning programs recommended by prominent and committed SMA scientists and voted most important by the SMA community. You can only vote for the Gwendolyn Strong Foundation once, so in order for SMA to have a chance at this critical funding, we need you to not only vote on Facebook, but get your friends and family involved as well. Go to http://VoteForSMA.com to vote and to learn more.

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This is Your Time to Make a Miracle

Posted on December 18, 2009 in FightSMA Articles


There is someone in the circles of people closest to you who would be delighted - in fact, honored - to make a major gift to FightSMA (www.fightsma.org). This may be a distant relative, a college friend who has “done well” or a business relationship who has become a friend.

For a person of means, a gift of $50,000 or even $100,000 is realistic. It’s not realistic for many of us (okay, pretty much ALL of us), but for someone who CAN make such a gift, it’s a blessing to them to make it. We have a responsibility, to the children we love and to the children we’ve met who are fighting SMA, to push through our own feelings of awkwardness or inadequacy - and we all have those feelings…all of us - and MAKE THE ASK.

So, take a deep breath. Or exhale a sigh of resignation…and read on.

And, hey, why are we on this planet anyway? To live cautiously and timidly? Are we supposed to end your days, saying “I should have…”

Hardly.

Listen to Shakespeare:

There is a tide in the affairs of men,
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their life
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.

So, the “Three Questions to Ask Yourself to Reach the Miracle.”

1. Who have I avoided sitting down with and making the hard ask, even though I KNOW they can make a very large gift? You may have asked them before, and after an uncomfortable and long silence, a few avoided glances, and some clearing of the throat, they said they’d think real hard about it and that was the last of it. It may have been five years since you’ve brought it up. But you need to do it again. They may have softened. They may be in a better place to consider it. If you don’t ask, you don’t get. Think about this person, then think of an approach. Talk through your approach with someone who knows you well and can bolster your confidence.

2. If I made a list of possible people to contact, have I exhausted all my circles? I bet you can come up with three good, realistic prospects. Think back to high school. Did you know that the quiet kid in the cadet corps who couldn’t play Taps has made several million dollars on Wall Street? Find him. Get back in touch. How about Uncle Harry? He just sold his carpet cleaning company. It wasn’t huge, but he cleared about $1.5 million. What’s he going to do with the money? Let the IRS have it? Stop him from dumping it down that rat hole. And what about acquaintances at church, in the Rotary? At work? Make a list of 10 relatives. Who do THEY know?

3. Have you visualized the amount of money you’re going to get? Think about fifty one-thousand dollar bills. Think hard about them. See those crisp, pretty bills in a suitcase, or in a big grocery bag. Enjoy the fact that you’re going to get someone to give them to you, for the most important cause of your life. In your mind, toss the bills up into the air and watch them flutter to the ground. Giggle about it. IT’S JUST MONEY, AND YOU CAN GET IT. Figure out an amount you want to ask for and make it feel real.

You can do this.

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Fight SMA Launches The Thumb Drive

Posted on July 7, 2009 in Spinal Muscular Atrophy Videos, FightSMA News


This week, Fight SMA sent packets to 30 medical supply companies across the Central Virginia area.  The effort, called “The Thumb Drive”, hopes to raise money for spinal muscular atrophy research.  The below video was included in the packet, and was loaded onto a flash memory storage drive, aka a “thumb drive”.

To join the Thumb Drive, please donate using this card (pdf), or by clicking here.

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