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Archive for the ‘In the News’ Category

Young Cancer patient gets rare opportunity to meet Dalai Lama

Monday, May 21st, 2007

20060915-dalai-lamareduced.jpg17-year-old Cancer patient gets rare opportunity to meet Dalai Lama

By PEGGY TOWNSEND
SENTINEL STAFF WRITER

Two days before he was to meet the Dalai Lama, 17-year-old Greg Melendy of Soquel lay in a bed at Dominican Hospital.

His immune system had crashed because of the drugs he took to stop a cancer that had roared into his body like some evil space invader.

Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia is what it was called.

Because he had no immunity, an infection had settled inside of Melendy. He was running a fever. Everyone wondered if the boy who had bought a grand piano for his high school choir as his Make-a-Wish gift would make it to the meeting that had been arranged by the Children’s Hospice and Palliative Care Coalition in Watsonville.

Everyone except Melendy.

“I cared so much about seeing the Dalai Lama, that I said: If it comes down to it, and they tell me I can’t leave, I will walk out of the hospital,” says Melendy, sitting under a knit afghan at his Soquel home, a watch cap on his head to ward off the chill.

He would have hitchhiked, he says.

But his immune system began to rebuild itself, tripling, then quadrupling in a recovery that was remarkable even with the drugs he had been given to combat its decline.

Last Sunday, he, his mom and girlfriend, along with Lori Butterworth and Devon Dabbs of the Children’s Hospice program, were able to drive to Palo Alto to meet the man who had come to talk to Stanford University professors and hand out awards, but had made time for Melendy with a coveted private audience.

Melendy wondered what he would say to a man considered to be one of the holiest people on earth.

20060915-dalai-lama-063.JPGHe had questions about life and about death. Questions about whether it would be possible to leave one’s fragile earthly body and become part of everything around you. Questions about compassion and his idea of being able to help other kids with cancer.

He knew there would not be enough time to get answers for all of them.

The Dalai Lama stood at the end of a hallway at his hotel in Palo Alto and waited for Melendy to come forward.

Melendy wore a suit coat and a yellow kata — a silken scarf that had been given to him by the lamas at the Land of Medicine Buddha Monastery in Soquel. It represented a human’s imperfections, they told him. He was to give it to the Dalai Lama to bless.

The Dalai Lama wore a red robe.

When Melendy saw the man who has met kings and presidents, he stopped and the Dalai Lama had to motion for Melendy to come forward.

“I could feel his energy and my energy,” Melendy says.

Melendy had thought a lot about the Dalai Lama and how he had given his whole life to loving people even if they had acted badly toward him; even if they had persecuted him.

20060915-dalai-lama-065.JPGSo he came up to the Tibetan Buddhist leader and put his hands on the lama’s shoulders.

“I love you,” Melendy told the holy man.

The Dalai Lama looked into Melendy’s eyes.

He laughed.

Then he took Melendy’s hand and led him into the room.

They talked for 20 minutes.

For details about the work of the children’s hospice visit www.childrenshospice.org or call 763-3070.

Contact Peggy Townsend at ptownsend@santacruzsentinel.com.

To Say, or Not to Say- Is This the Question??????

Monday, May 21st, 2007

What do you say when a child, a friend, a loved one dies? Words seem so inadequate – we are often literally speechless. After all what’s the point, we can’t say or do anything to help or can we?

What do you say when a child, a friend, a loved one dies? Words seem so inadequate – we are often literally speechless. After all what’s the point, we can’t say or do anything to help or can we?

DO listen, listen, listen. Remember every grief needs at least a thousand tellings or more.

DO read an article or go online and get some information about grief to help you better understand what your friend is going through.

DO say the name of the child or person who died out loud – the grieving often find it comforting to hear and say the name of their loved one aloud and know that they are remembered and missed.

DO be patient. Grief has no timeline - respect each person’s journey

DO let the person guide you. For example, “I have such a wonderful memory of (person’s name). Would you like me to share it now or another time?”

DO become informed about your friend’s cultural and/or ethnic beliefs, rituals, customs related to death and bereavement, so that you are better able to provide appropriate support.

DO reminisce and share stories and memories

DO remember that grief is a process. We visit and revisit the thoughts, emotions over an extended period of time. We never get over grief. We are forever changed by the death (or by the loss).

DO stay away from “should’s” —- for example “You should go out more, try to eat more or less, go to church more, read this book, come over for lunch, etc.

DON’T avoid those who are grieving. It is important to them and to you that you express your empathy and sympathy rather than simply doing nothing out of your own distress and discomfort.

DON’T be afraid of silence. The ability to jbe present and quiet with your friend can provide comfort.

DON’T say “I understand” or “I understand how you feel.” This tends to shut the person down. Encourage conversation instead. We understand our own grief journey and by listening we will understand another’s.

DON’T let the fear of saying the wrong thing stop you from supporting your friend.

DON’T say “You shouldn’t feel that way.” We sometimes say this when a person talks about guilt or anger. Remember it is important to listen even though it may not make sense to you.

DON’T say “Put it behind you” or “It’s time to get on with your life.” This is easier said than done. Your friend may wish that they could return to life before the loss, yet it takes time to heal.

DON’T try to fix the pain. It is hard to be with someone in grief and so we have a tendency to want to fix it, take it away, freeze up, or be frightened of their big feelings. You will be offering your friend a huge heart gift by listening without judgment or attempting to fix their pain.

NEVER say “You can always have another child” or “It’s so good that you have other children.” Each child’s life is their own unique lifetime, one worth remembering, honoring and celebrating.

Contributed by Debra Houston, LMFT, Children & Youth Grief Support Program Coordinator, Hospice Caring Project and Loretta J. Ferris, MFT, Family Services Director, Jacob’s Heart Children’s Cancer Association

Johnny Depp Remembers Dustin by Wearing Leather and Silver Wrist Band

Saturday, May 19th, 2007

20051222-depp.jpgActor Johnny Depp wears a silver and leather Children’s Hospice memorial wrist band during his Hand and Foot Cermony…

Dustin loved Sponge Bob Square Pants, Hilary Duff & good times with his family. An actor at heart, he received his screen actors guild card from his beloved friend Melissa Gilbert. For Dustin life was a thrilling adventure and he truly embodied his message that “Today is a gift…have fun!”

Dustin is no longer with us, but this week he was remembered by many when Johnny Depp wore Dustin’s memorial bracelet during his induction to the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

“I am honored to be associated with brave little Dustin by wearing this silver and leather wrist band,” Depp commented shortly after the ceremony.

Anyone interested in supporting Children’s Hospice by purchasing a memorial wrist band may do so by clicking here.

ChildrensHospice.org thanks Jennifer Scarbrough of Zia Jewelry for the original design and production of these bracelets. Because of the generosity of everyone at Zia Designs, 100% of the proceeds from the bracelets benefit children and the families of children with life-threatening conditions.

Bill Signed into Law! - The Nick Snow Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Act of 2006 - Assembly Bill 1745

Monday, January 15th, 2007

20060921-lori-introducing-shannon.jpgWe want to thank all of you for your support, as well, in helping to move AB 1745 forward in the CA State Legislature!

We will keep you posted on the drafting and submission of the Children’s Hospice Eligibility Waiver.

An Historic Moment for California’s Children.

Assembly Bill 1745 -Nick’s Vision for a New Children’s Hospice Benefit

The Children’s Hospice and Palliative Care waiver program mandated by the Nick Snow Act is a pilot program that will begin in early 2009 in Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Diego, Alameda and Santa Clara Counties. In 2010, six additional counties will be added: Humboldt, Marin, Orange, Sacramento, San Francisco and Sonoma. In 2011, Fresno and Los Angeles Counties will be added. Our goal is for a state-wide benefit once the three-year pilot project is successful. This information is from the Children’s Medical Services office of the California State Department of Health Services website.

Text of Assembly Bill 1745 - The Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Act of 2006

SECTION 1. Section 14132.74 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:
14132.74. (a) The department, in consultation with interested stakeholders, shall develop, as a pilot project, a pediatric palliative care benefit to evaluate whether, and to what extent, such a benefit should be offered under the Medi-Cal program. The pilot project shall be implemented only to the extent that federal financial
participation is available.

(b) Beneficiaries eligible to receive the pediatric palliative care benefit shall be 21 years of age or younger. The department may further limit the population served by the pilot project to a size deemed sufficient to make the evaluation required pursuant to subdivision (a).

(c) Services covered under the pediatric palliative care benefit shall be designed to meet the unique needs of children, and shall include those types of services that are available through the Medi-Cal hospice benefit. The benefit shall also include the following services, regardless of whether those services are covered under the Medi-Cal hospice benefit:

(1) Hospice services that are provided at the same time that curative treatment is available, to the extent that the services are not duplicative.

(2) Hospice services provided to individuals whose conditions may result in death, regardless of the estimated length of the individual’s remaining period of life.

(3) Any other services that the department determines to be appropriate.
(d) The department in consultation with interested stakeholders shall determine the medical conditions and prognoses that render a beneficiary eligible for the benefit.

(e) Providers authorized to provide services under the pilot program shall include licensed hospice agencies and home health agencies licensed to provide hospice care, subject to criteria developed by the department for provider participation.

(f) (1) The department shall submit any necessary application to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for a waiver to implement the pilot project described in this section. The department shall determine the form of waiver most appropriate to achieve the purposes of this section. The waiver request shall be included in any waiver application submitted within on year after the effective date of this section, or shall be submitted as an independent application within that time period. After federal approval is secured, the department shall implement the waiver within six months of the date of approval.

(2) The waiver shall be designed to cover a period time necessary to evaluate the medical necessity for, and cost-effectiveness of, a pediatric palliative care benefit. The results of the pilot project shall be made available to the Legislature and appropriate policy and fiscal committees to determine the effectiveness of the benefit.

(g) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the department may implement the provisions of this section by means of provider bulletins or similar instructions, without the adoption of regulations. The department shall notify the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature of its intent to issue a provider bulletin or other similar instructions at least five days prior to issuance.

(h) (1) Nothing in this section shall result in the elimination or reduction of any covered benefits or services under the Medi-Cal program or the California Children’s Services Program.

(2) This section shall not affect an individual’s eligibility to receive, concurrently with the benefit provided for in this section, any services, including home health services, for which the individual would have been eligible in the absence of this section.

Award Winning Actor Melissa Gilbert Voted Board President of Children’s Hospice Coalition

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

October 16, 2006 (Los Angeles, CA) – Melissa Gilbert, the award winning actor, director, producer, and former president of the Screen Actor’s Guild, has been elected board president of the Children’s Hospice Coalition (www.childrenshospice.org), a nonprofit organization that works to expand hospice and palliative care services to children who are suffering from life-threatening conditions. Ms. Gilbert has been actively involved as a board member of the organization since 2004.

“We are delighted to have Melissa as our board president,” said Lori Butterworth and Devon Dabbs, co-founders and co-executive directors of Children’s Hospice Coalition (CHC). “Her dedication, enthusiasm, and tenacity will be an incredible asset as we work together to ensure that all children have the quality and type of care they need as they go through some of life’s most difficult challenges.”

Trisha Meraz was elected to serve as the organization’s vice president. Mrs. Meraz’s son Dustin died from cancer in 2002. Dustin, to whom Ms. Gilbert refers as her “guardian angel,” always wanted to be an actor and Ms. Gilbert arranged for members of the Screen Actors Guild to present Dustin with his honorary Screen Actor’s Guild card. Dustin’s poignant words, “Today is a gift, have fun,” are featured on CHC’s memorial bracelets that are worn by celebrities such as Johnny Depp, Mandy Moore, Kiefer Sutherland, Jeremy Piven, George Clooney, Tom Bergeron, Jane Kaczmarek, and Bradley Whitford.

“I am so pleased to have the opportunity to serve as board president for this remarkable organization,” said Ms. Gilbert. “I have not had to go through the experience of seeing a child of mine on hospice, but as the mother of a seriously premature child, I can understand all too well how heartrending it is to have a sick child. Working with such powerhouses as Devon, Lori, and Trisha, I know that we’ll be able to make children’s hospice and palliative care a reality to the tens of thousands of children who so desperately need it.”

Ms. Gilbert replaces outgoing board president, David Robles, president and CEO of California Commercial Interiors, who served as president for four years. As board president, Ms. Gilbert will be responsible for: overseeing, coordinating and driving the organization’s strategic and tactical operations; developing objectives and timetables for officers and board committees; and serving as the organization’s public spokesperson.

Children’s Hospice Coalition is spearheading the growing movement to ensure that children with life-threatening conditions can live well and die gently. Toward this end, Children’s Hospice Coalition successfully convinced the California State Legislature, California Department of Health, and the Governor’s office to enact the Nick Snow Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Act of 2006, which will assure that children in California have access to compassionate, family-centered care without having to give up treatment intended to save their lives. The bill was signed into law on September 19, 2006.

Children’s Hospice Coalition has several effective and innovative national programs that support families of children with life-threatening conditions including the Partnership for Children, a community care coordination model which promotes family-centered, compassionate care to children with serious illnesses; the Partnership for Parents (www.partnershipforparents.org) a bilingual online support network for parents of seriously ill children; and the Children’s Hospice Coalition’s Memorial Bracelet campaign, which promotes awareness about the unique needs of seriously ill children and their families.

Melissa Gilbert has demonstrated her in-depth knowledge of acting, advocacy, and the entertainment industry during two consecutive terms as the 23rd president of Screen Actors Guild. Ms. Gilbert also has served as vice president on the AFL-CIO executive council, vice president for the California Labor Federation, and as a commissioner on the California Film Commission. A native of Los Angeles and a product of a long line of entertainers, Ms. Gilbert stole America’s heart at age nine when she joined the cast of Little House on the Prairie. Since starring on the popular series for 10 seasons, she has continued her success as an actor, director, and producer—winning awards in all three areas.

View Photos from Governor’s Bill Signing Ceremony

Thursday, September 21st, 2006

20060921-david-and-shannon2.jpg20060921-david-tyler.jpg20060921-gov-david-and-jessica4.jpg20060921-governor-presents-signed-bill-to-shannon2.jpg20060921-lori-introducing-shannongov.jpg20060921-shannon-and-devon-with-bill.jpg

Melissa Gilbert testifies to Senate Health Committee for the Nick Snow Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Act

Tuesday, July 11th, 2006

nick1.jpgCelebrating AB1745 “The Nick Snow Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Act

We are delighted, ecstatic, overjoyed, etc. to report that our sponsored bill, AB 1745, passed with overwhelming support at yesterday’s Senate Health Committee hearing! The final vote was 9-0 with every member of the committee voting “aye” in support! Next stop Appropriations Committee, followed by the floor of the Senate, back to the floor of the Assembly and then on to the Governor’s desk.

Please read bill language below.

We met with key Republican members of the Senate Health a few weeks ago, but up until the vote was taken we did not have a firm commitment that the Republicans were going to vote for the bill.

Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Coalition board member, Actress Melissa Gilbert, testified sharing her personal experience working with children in need of pediatric hospice and palliative care services. She was even moved to tears during her testimony and there was not a dry eye in the house. One could hear a pin drop in the hearing room during her remarks. Shannon Snow, the Nick Snow’s mother, also did a great job in sharing her story. Several others testified in support for us, including the Dustin Meraz’s brother and mother , the family of Nick Snow, Jessica (a cancer patient) and other advocates. There was no opposition.

We were also able to arrange for Dept. of Health spokesperson, Jennifer Kent, to testify at the hearing that she was “working with us”, a strong and well-received show of support.

20060815-melissa-testify.JPGAfter the hearing, we met with the top three legislative deputies to the Governor, as well as the Governor’s Special Advisor, Bonnie Reiss, to discuss the bill. The Governor’s office appears committed to working with us on the measure. They even committed to helping us with the Dept. of Finance in keeping the costs to the bill at a minimum in preparation for the upcoming Senate Appropriations Committee hearing. This is all extremely positive for us.

We want to thank all of you for your support, as well, in helping to move AB 1745 forward in the CA State Legislature! We will keep you posted.

Assembly Bill 1745 - The Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Act of 2006

SECTION 1. Section 14132.74 is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:
14132.74. (a) The department, in consultation with interested stakeholders, shall develop, as a pilot project, a pediatric palliative care benefit to evaluate whether, and to what extent, such a benefit should be offered under the Medi-Cal program. The pilot project shall be implemented only to the extent that federal financial
participation is available.

(b) Beneficiaries eligible to receive the pediatric palliative care benefit shall be 21 years of age or younger. The department may further limit the population served by the pilot project to a size deemed sufficient to make the evaluation required pursuant to subdivision (a).

(c) Services covered under the pediatric palliative care benefit shall be designed to meet the unique needs of children, and shall include those types of services that are available through the Medi-Cal hospice benefit. The benefit shall also include the following services, regardless of whether those services are covered under the Medi-Cal hospice benefit:

(1) Hospice services that are provided at the same time that curative treatment is available, to the extent that the services are not duplicative.

(2) Hospice services provided to individuals whose conditions may result in death, regardless of the estimated length of the individual’s remaining period of life.

(3) Any other services that the department determines to be appropriate.
(d) The department in consultation with interested stakeholders shall determine the medical conditions and prognoses that render a beneficiary eligible for the benefit.

(e) Providers authorized to provide services under the pilot program shall include licensed hospice agencies and home health agencies licensed to provide hospice care, subject to criteria developed by the department for provider participation.

(f) (1) The department shall submit any necessary application to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for a waiver to implement the pilot project described in this section. The department shall determine the form of waiver most appropriate to achieve the purposes of this section. The waiver request shall be included in any waiver application submitted within on year after the effective date of this section, or shall be submitted as an independent application within that time period. After federal approval is secured, the department shall implement the waiver within six months of the date of approval.

(2) The waiver shall be designed to cover a period time necessary to evaluate the medical necessity for, and cost-effectiveness of, a pediatric palliative care benefit. The results of the pilot project shall be made available to the Legislature and appropriate policy and fiscal committees to determine the effectiveness of the benefit.

(g) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, the department may implement the provisions of this section by means of provider bulletins or similar instructions, without the adoption of regulations. The department shall notify the fiscal and appropriate policy committees of the Legislature of its intent to issue a provider bulletin or other similar instructions at least five days prior to issuance.

(h) (1) Nothing in this section shall result in the elimination or reduction of any covered benefits or services under the Medi-Cal program or the California Children’s Services Program.

(2) This section shall not affect an individual’s eligibility to receive, concurrently with the benefit provided for in this section, any services, including home health services, for which the individual would have been eligible in the absence of this section.

Read About Children’s Hospice Founders - Santa Cruz Sentinel

Friday, May 12th, 2006

20060915-devonheadshot4.JPG20060915-lori-headshot2.JPGFeatures Lori Butterworth and Devon Dabbs

The Turning Point
By PEGGY TOWNSEND Sentinel staff writer

Nobody thought much about the sight of two blond women crying in each other’s arms in the parking lot of Mountain Elementary School on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.

Lots of people had cried that day at the news that three hijacked planes had plowed into the World Trade Center and Pentagon, and a fourth had nose-dived into a Pennsylvania field.

But this was different.

This moment would shift the lives of those two women, and possibly the lives of thousands of children and families, in a whole new way.

Nearly five years later, the two Soquel moms — Lori Butterworth and Devon Dabbs Maggard — are heading a program that is fighting to change the way critically ill children get hospice care and are rubbing shoulders not only with powerful politicians but also Hollywood heavyweights like Johnny Depp, Toby Maguire and the former head of the Screen Actors Guild Melissa Gilbert.

They have helped write a California bill that would begin the process of changing children’s hospice rules and will be the focus of a Senate hearing next month. They have organized a statewide coalition of health agencies to push for children’s hospice care, set up a model for the program here in Watsonville and now head an organization with a $500,000 budget.

And sometimes, they find themselves sitting beside a dying child’s bed or holding a parent whose daughter or son has just died, and weeping.

Standing at their work stations at their new office in Watsonville, the two women say if they had known what lay ahead of them; if they had known how their lives would change directions on that clear September morning they might have been more worried.

“We said, ‘let’s just make some calls’ and it snowballed before we even realized the magnitude of what were talking about,” Maggard says.

“If we knew what was going to be involved, we would have been more daunted.”

A new energy
On the day they met, Maggard was a documentary filmmaker and Butterworth was the founder of a support organization for families of kids with cancer called Jacob’s Heart.

Both had been unable to contact relatives in cities the Sept. 11 terrorists had hit; both had broken down with worry.

It wasn’t long before they were huddled over cups of coffee, talking about their lives, their kids, about Butterworth’s work with children with cancer and then finally a topic that was to be at the core of their lives for the next five years — a federal rule which forces parents of terminally ill kids to stop any treatment intended to save their child’s life in order to qualify for the hospice care benefit.

Maggard had never heard of the rule.

“But it was an easy concept to grasp,” she says.

“We thought it was an institutional and policy problem and therefore could be solved,” says Butterworth.

“It didn’t make sense to me that you lose support if you decide you want to live.”

Energized by the emotions of that day, the two women, who look enough alike that they could be sisters, decided to do a little research. Before they knew it, they were attending conferences, making calls to children’s hospital officials and renting a hole-in-the-wall office in Soquel to start their drive to change a 30-year-old federal rule that had been put in place mostly for adults.

The law said that in order for someone, including a critically ill child, to get the hospice care benefit — 24-hour on-call help from a nurse, a social worker, a chaplain and volunteers, along with respite care and pain management — they had to give up any treatment intended to cure or prolong their life and have a doctor say they had less than six months to give.

That makes sense for 90-year-old cancer patients, Butterworth and Maggard thought, but not for a 6-year-old with neuroblastoma or a 13-year-old with a failing heart.

“It’s inhuman to say to parents that you have to stop chemo so you can get hospice care,” Butterworth says, her eyes filling with tears as she tells of a father who couldn’t get hospice, so he had to give his daughter her daily injections himself.

“His daughter would cry whenever he came in,” say Butterworth, the mother of two, “and so that memory he has is of his daughter, as she lay dying, crying every time he came in the room.”

Maggard, who has three children, listens.

“Sometimes, it just needs one person to put a voice to an issue,” says Maggard.

“We knew if we could give a voice to this, there was a good chance people would rally around it.”

Fire and earth
Butterworth and Maggard wear earrings with different Chinese characters on each one.

One of the characters is a symbol for fire.

The other symbolizes earth.

They bought pairs of each and split them up, “to try to balance each other out,” Butterworth says with a laugh.

Butterworth, who talks with the speed of a world-class sprinter, says she is the fire of the pair. Maggard, steady and calm, is earth.

“They’re a dynamic duo,” says Tree Dunbar, director of Clinical Services for the local Hospice Caring Project. “…Something happened when they found each other.

“It’s like a big energy.”

Those who know the women describe them variously as smart, selfless, ballsy, kind-hearted, tenacious, focused. “Like terrier dogs,” says the mother of a boy who had cancer, “they don’t let go.”

Early on, a state health official had told the pair, “Ladies, you’ve got to be the squeaky wheel,” Butterworth recalls.

“So that’s what we’ve done,” she says.

They’ve called government officials, heads of charities, cancer specialists, insurance executives. “Smile and dial,” is their name for it.

Once the assistant of a powerful woman snapped, “it’s never enough with you people.”

Butterworth told her : “You know what, this is my job to advocate for these kids.

“I’m not doing it for me.”

20060915-img_1434.JPGActress Melissa Gilbert, former president of the Screen Actors Guild and best known for her appearance on TV’s “Little House on the Prairie,” calls the women fearless and remembers her own first contact with them and their cause..

She was at Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles with Toby Maguire “Spiderman” and Leonardo di Caprio “Titanic” to give an honorary Screen Actors Guild card to a little boy named Dustin Meraz who dreamed of being an actor, but who was dying of cancer.

While kids on the ward swarmed the actors, a woman with brown eyes and shoulder-length blond hair slipped up beside Gilbert and in a rush of words told Gilbert about the children’s hospice project, about kids who died without care that could have kept them from suffering, about those who died in a hospital when they wanted to die at home.

It was Butterworth.

“I remember I felt like I had been hit by a tornado. She left me breathless,” Gilbert says. “How could I say no?”

Gilbert agreed to be on the Children’s Hospice and Palliative Care Coalition’s Board of Directors, enlisting the aid of friends like actor Johnny Depp, who set off a firestorm of fund-raising simply by wearing one of the organization’s bracelets.

Soon, thanks to Gilbert, support began coming in from other Hollywood stars like Bruce Willis, Jeremy Piven of “Entourage,” Kiefer Sutherland, George Clooney and Tom Cruise, and Gilbert spoke out regularly on the issue, even attending medical conferences to educate herself on the issue.

“We tend to make heroes of people who score terrific numbers in sports games, or who make big money at the box office,” says Gilbert. “But women like Lori and Devon are the real heroes.

“They change peoples’ lives on a daily basis, not just for a couple of hours in a movie theater.

“I’m amazed by what they have achieved.”

For Nick
Shannon Snow remembers how the two women came into her life as her son Nick was being treated for a cancer of the nervous system at Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles.

The boy with the coffee-latte colored skin and curly brown hair proudly told Butterworth he had “flunked hospice twice.”

The truth was, Snow says, that she arranged her own hospice-style care for her son, because getting the service would have meant he would have not been able to get the experimental chemotherapy she thought he needed.

She tells the story in a soft voice of how Nick had said he was tired of the chemotherapy, but had rallied with the group of volunteers and a nurse around him and how the final round of the treatment had been the thing that cured him of the cancer.

He was cancer-free when he died last month after surgery to repair a perforated intestine.

Nick was 16.

For Snow, Butterworth and Maggard’s efforts are invaluable.

“A parent with a sick child would never be able to do what these women are doing,” she says.

She marvels at the fact that the two women are not involved in the cause because their children are ill, or because they have experienced the situation themselves.

“They don’t have to do this,” Snow says. “They must have incredibly large hearts.”

Dr. Lonnie Zeltzer, director of the pain program at UCLA, applauded the women’s efforts saying she sees regularly children whose parents refuse to give up treatment until the last moment. That means, she says, children don’t get services that could alleviate their pain, they spend more time in the hospital or ER and families lose professional support they need to face the critical illness of a child.

Butterworth and Maggard, she says, “are both among the brightest, most energetic professionals I know.”

Sitting in their new well-lit office with its stylish, modern furniture dotted with photos, handmade quilts and a pink angel lamp given to them by a young girl who died, Butterworth and Maggard tell stories of the children they have met through their work:

The 13-year-old whose third transplanted heart was failing and who had to fight to go home to die because the medicine that would keep her heart beating a little longer was considered “curative.”

The 11-year-old girl with neuroblastoma who was so eloquent when she went to Washington D.C. to lobby for the hospice rule change only six months before she died.

And the 14-year-old girl who had called her hospice nurse on her cell phone in the middle of the night. “I’m dying and I need a friend,” she said, “Will you come over now?”

“I see us as conduits,” says Butterworth. “We can stand in the gap between need and the people who can fix it.”

Even though even though their days are filled with cooking and car pooling, fundraising and phone calls, there is something, they say, that just keeps them going.

“It’s not like we had a grand plan of how it was going to come it,” Butterworth says. “It’s like you get this notion in your heart and head that you can do it.

“… It’s like you just get called to do something.”

Lori Butterworth and Devon Dabbs Maggard
What they have done
Since Sept. 11, 2001, they have formed the statewide Children’s Hospice and Palliative Care Coalition, have helped author a bill to change hospice benefit rules for children in California, have set up a demonstration children’s hospice program in Watsonville called Partnership for Children and set up an online resource for parents of critically ill children at www.partnershipforparents.org.

Where they get their money
Their $500,000 budget is funded by the California Health Care Foundation, Community Foundation, Hospice Foundation of the Central Coast, Newman’s Own, Santa Cruz Memorial, the Harden Foundation, D’Arrigo Brothers, Robert Woods Johnson Foundation and the sale of bracelets and donations.

About AB1745
Would require that the state apply for a federal waiver to allow children to receive the hospice care benefit. Some 10,000-12,000 children on public health programs in California would be eligible. Cost would be negligible because it would save on hospitalization and other costs. The bill passed the California Assembly last year on a 77-0 vote and is now awaiting Senate hearings.

For details or to order a bracelet, visit www.childrenshospice.org or call 763-3070.

Parade Magazine - “Today is a Gift” Children’s Hospice Bracelet worn by Johnny Depp and Several Celebrities

Friday, April 21st, 2006

20060528-jeremy-piven.JPGJohnny deppPage 2 Parade Magazine -
Q - When Johnny Depp put his hands in cement at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, he wore a wrist band. Any significance?

A - The silver and leather band (bracelet) inscribe, “Today is a Gift, Have Fun: - was a gift from actress Melissa Gilbert, a board member of Children’s Hospice. It quotes a boy named Dustin, who died of cancer at 11. “There is profound simplicity in Dustin’s message,” says Depp, 42, who has two young children.

Actors Jeremy Piven from the HBO hit “Entourage” as well as actors Melissa Gilbert, Bruce Boxlietner, Sarah Gilbert, Julia Roberts, Bruce Willis, Keifer Sutherland, Tom Cruise, Mandy Moore, Tom Bergeron and many other Hollywood celebrities are now sporting these bracelets. Click here to order yours now! 100% of the proceeds benefit Children’s Hospice!

Johnny Depp’s Fans - Exciting Merchandise for Children’s Hospice

Sunday, March 19th, 2006

Johnny DeppClick here to see how Johnny Depp’s Fans celebrate his birthday…by selling really cool merchandise. All proceeds benefit Children’s Hospice & Palliative Care Coalition.