I just emailed them. Thanks to Narcotrent for posting the email address.
<i>I wish to comment on this article. I have to say, you were poorly informed, and chose a less-than-model family to do the article on. I myself have CF and I'm big in the CF community. I talk to a lot of CFers, offer advice when I can, etc. And I think you should know that that article appalled most of the ones I know that read it.
The one sentence you wrote that I really thought was on target was: "They no longer die routinely in their early teens. Now they make it into their 20s and even 30s." That's very true and very correct. But it's just about the only thing that didn't offend everyone I know that read it.
The comment about not being a football team captain or running the mile with our peers was garbage. I am not a particularly healthy CFer. I am on three nebulized meds, I go on IVs once or twice a year, I expect to die probably in my 30s (I know of some CFers who are ridiculously healthy and live to see 50s, 60s, though they're rare). And I think you should know that I ran the mile with my peers in 8th grade, finished in under 9 minutes. There's a guy on the website I visit that was captain of his hockey team for years.
I'm pleased that you didn't treat CF like it's no big deal (some people do that and it drives us nuts, because it still kills). But you went overboard. The doctor for that family, I might add, sounds like a damn quack. Keeping kids out of public school to avoid germs is insane and uncalled for. Many docs would tell you so. It's actually good for kids to be among groups so that their immune systems can build up immunities to common colds and what have you.
This sentence disgusted me: "No mixing with large groups. No family trips to lakes or rivers. No backyard pools." I went swimming in many various pools, backyard pools, country club pools, water parks on vacation... I take a family trip to Lake George in NY every year, and yes, I swim in the lake. No mixing with large groups is garbage as well. Some people DO take this approach with their CF children, and I feel terrible for those kids. I grew up like a normal kid. I went swimming, I went on sleepovers. I played with frogs and dug up worms to go fishing. I am 22 years old and still have 70% of my lung function. That's pretty damn good, if I do say so myself. I think showing this kind of CF family example is terrible. It gives some CF families the idea that this is the way to go, and I (as well as many others) think that that's rubbish.
CF doesn't get a whole lot of media footage, but I have to tell you... If my choices are NO coverage or this kind of coverage, I'd rather have none. This article sends the wrong idea to people who have no idea what CF is, and to CF families who are still learning how to deal with CF. Yes, you have to adjust around it. What you don't have to do is put your child in a goddamn bubble. What good is a life that's maybe a few years longer, but lived locked away in a closet? Versus a life that's maybe a few years shorter, but full, and lived like any other child, playing, having friends? Maybe some parents prefer the hermetically sealed lifestyle, but those kids are the ones that grow up to resent their parents. My parents, CF or not, allowed me to be a kid, and I will always be grateful to them for it. Our lives are already shorter, why also make them less worth living, by taking away all the things kids enjoy?
I just believe it's important that you know that many CFers, including myself, think this is a TERRIBLE example of CF to show the world. You could've chosen a much more well-rounded family.
- Emily Lastname, of CT, 22 year old with CF.</i>