Nov/03/08 09:56 PM Filed in:
The
U
Kelly, who never could get
the Bills over the Super Bowl hump in his Hall of
Fame career, has a new mission these days -- to
get every state to test for 54 potentially fatal
diseases that could be diagnosed at birth. Only
one state, Minnesota, tests for that many today.
He's on this mission because of the death of his son,
Hunter, in 2005, from a rare brain disease called
Krabbe Leukodystrophy. The disease (leukodystrophies
afflict one of every 100,000 American births) could
have been diagnosed at birth, but New York State did
not test for the illness when Hunter was born in 1997.
"The tragedy for Hunter, and for so many children born
with fatal illnesses, is that they're simply born in
the wrong state,'' Kelly said the other night. "If you
don't think that's something that just tears at your
heart every day ...''
I've known Kelly for a long time, and I've always found
him to be one of the biggest life-of-the-party guys
I've covered. He was a prolific pre-curfew beer man in
his Bills training-camp years, when the Buffalo players
were as tight as a team could be. But when I saw him
the other day, I saw he'd changed. There was a grimness
to a once-carefree guy, with more lines on his face
than I remembered. The grimness is not from giving up;
it's a grim determination.
He's already seen governors of three states -- New
York, Pennsylvania and Kansas -- and gotten each to
increase dramatically the number of diseases tested for
at birth. When babies are born, their heels are pricked
and a blood sample taken to test for diseases. With
Kelly's lobbying, New York has increased from 11 to 44
diseases tested for, Pennsylvania from 11 to 29, and
Kansas from four to 29.
Parents can buy a kit to screen their children for the
maximum number of diseases for less than $100, but
Kelly, and his foundation, want the tests to be done
for every child as a matter of course. Considering that
the costs of caring for children with one of many known
leukodystrophies can run from between $500,000 and $1
million per year, it seems like early-testing money
would be well spent.
"I never won a Super Bowl,'' said Kelly, "and for a
long time that really bothered me, obviously. But this
is real. This is life. My Super Bowl victory will be to
get every state to adopt universal newborn screening so
we can save lives that are now being lost needlessly.
When that day comes, that victory will be 10 times
better than any Super Bowl.''
Because New York now tests for Krabbe, Kelly met a
perfectly healthy boy, now a year and half old, who was
diagnosed at birth and successfully treated. "Little
Elmer,'' he said with a grin. Now his goal is to meet a
lot more Elmers. If you'd like to help, or learn more
about Kelly's mission, you can go to
www.huntershope.org.