Case study 2: Allison Watson
“Personally, it’s about achieving satisfaction from my work – if I can help one other family by offering a sympathetic ear, or directing them to some helpful information then it is worth the effort”
As a
With the help of a colleague, Allison set up the Ring20 Research and Support UK CIO to represent those with Ring Chromosome 20 Syndrome. The primary motive was, as she puts it, “to pull together and signpost families, patients and health professionals to the latest information on r(20) through a ‘one stop shop’; to provide a support service to both newly diagnosed and families with existing r(20) family members; to be able to engage in and help fund important research into this rare disease.”
“Personally, it’s about achieving satisfaction from my work – if I can help one other family by offering a sympathetic ear, or directing them to some helpful information then it is worth the effort,” says Allison.
But as a
“After having attended a number of Findacure workshops on various topics, from Trustees to clinical research studies, I was lucky to be a mentee on the inaugural mentoring programme in my 1st full year in post as Secretary for my charity.”
“The programme enabled us to submit our first (and successful!) grant application for funding – allowing us to acquire necessary funding to attend events and host a charity stand; informed us of key conferences/events in the rare disease world that were pertinent to attend, recommended social media best practice (we now have a dedicated social media volunteer) and enabled first-hand experience of running a families conference. My mentor had a number of years of experience in her field and that was contributory to the support and advice she was able to provide in so many different areas.”
Allison and her charity benefitted from Findacure’s expertise after being recommended by their Medical Advisor, Dr Sophia Varadkar.
“Findacure provides a unique service to rare disease patient support groups such as ours, offering free workshops on topics that are pertinent to the majority. These events allow sharing of information amongst groups to inform best practice in a way that is cost-effective (budget, time and resources) to all.”
“Whilst the conditions we support are all different, the challenges we face, the bureaucracy we have to navigate and the need to support families, patients and health professionals are all common themes. Findacure events and information provision help us to meet these needs, better informed and stronger together.”
Findacure is grateful to our volunteer Samiksha Pattanaik for writing this case study.