The Kidney Citizen May 2018 | Page 4

By Mike Guffey , DPC Board Treasurer Why Advocate? After the January Education call, I had a couple of people thank me for my participation and say they could tell I feel passionately about my need to advocate on behalf of ESRD patients. For those of you who were not able to attend the call, let me explain my passion for you. Like many of you, I crashed into dialysis with no prior planning or education. I got up one morning hoping to take in some sun and warm up on vacation and by noon was hospitalized in the ICU with a diagnosis of End Stage Renal Disease. (No matter how many times they tell you not to worry, that is just a governmental label, End Stage does not sound comforting or reassuring to me.) My journey living (and working) with the disease led me quickly to the DPC website and soon after that to applying for a position on the DPC Board. To my amazement, I was 4 accepted onto the Board and soon found myself at my first fly-in with no idea what to expect. Why advocate? To put a human face with an issue. At my first fly in, I learned how important it is to personalize an issue. I could sit with my Senator (or even better his aide) and explain how a proposed bill was either going to improve or worsen my life. It really was not about the facts, although DPC had me prepared with handouts to leave behind with all sorts of facts and figures. It was about the fact that I could explain to them that I was their constituent (a voter they needed to keep their position), and I was willing to come visit them to explain my concerns as well as those of an additional 3,000 dialysis patients and potential voters. (And, I warned them on that first visit, I am persistent. I have been on the DPC Board since 2011, and DPC’s representative to Kidney Care Partners