SPRINGFIELD – State Senator Mattie Hunter (D-Chicago) advanced legislation out of the Senate Public Health committee Tuesday that would take a multipronged approach to fighting sickle cell disease that includes new funding and programs for educational materials, research, and treatment of the condition affecting roughly 3500 people in Illinois.
“The goal here is to curb the deep social impact and mortality rate of sickle cell disease,” Hunter said. “We know it tends to affect underserved communities, who consistently lag behind when it comes to access to comprehensive care and preventative treatment. This is a meaningful step toward closing that gap for future generations of African-American children.”
Senate Bill 3107 creates the Sickle Cell Prevention, Care and Treatment Program under the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The program is designed to expand efforts and resources for the prevention, care and treatment of sickle cell disease, including an educational outreach campaign.
The program would provide the following:
The measure also directs HFS to perform a study with assistance from the Center for Minority Health Services and representatives from healthcare providers and community-based organizations to determine the following:
The sickle cel train an inherited blood disorder that affects approximately 8 percent of African-Americans. In order to develop sickle cell disease, both parents must possess the sickle cell trait or have the sickle disease.
In light of the important decisions voters will make this year, Senator Hunter highlighted a true champion of African-American voting rights and racial equality – Fannie Lou Hamer – during Black History Month.
Fannie Lou Hamer's activism in the 1960s propelled the civil rights movement and mobilized thousands of black voters to engage in the political process, and she bore the scars from countless violent attempts to silence and intimate her along the way.
In light of the important decisions voters will make this year, State Senator Mattie Hunter decided to highlight a true champion of African-American voting rights and racial equality – Fannie Lou Hamer – for Black History Month.
Fannie Lou Hamer's activism in the 1960s propelled the civil rights movement and mobilized thousands of black voters to engage in the political process, and she bore the scars from countless violent attempts to silence and intimate her along the way.
SPRINGFIELD – State Senator Mattie Hunter (D-Chicago) released the following statement in response to Governor JB Pritzker’s budget address on Wednesday:
“I was pleased the governor proposed rate increases for Medicaid providers and Community Care Program providers, as well as significant overhauls and investments in the Department of Children and Family Services. Pritzker’s budget puts Illinois on the right path toward equitable delivery of human services for children and families.
“The governor and I share a demonstrated commitment to reducing health-care disparities and creating a child welfare system where no child’s health and well-being is neglected. I look forward to working with him to achieve these goals.”
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