Over
the last one hundred years,
research has lead to important medical breakthroughs. New treatments
and cures have provided a bright light through the darkness of
suffering experienced by people who have lung disease.
The American Lung Association®,
founded to fight the public health crisis of tuberculosis, has been a
leader in developing new techniques to diagnose and manage disease.
Both the national American Lung Association® and your local state chapters
have been at the forefront of significant scientific discoveries that
have lead to a better understanding of a number of diseases.
Hundreds of thousands of people benefit from these
advances: the child who can be successful in the classroom and at play
because her new asthma medication adequately manages her disease, the
man who lives to see his grandchildren born because he was able to beat
tuberculosis as a child, or the young woman who breaks her addiction to
cigarettes with a nicotine patch. These people, leading happy and
healthy lives, are experiencing the results of research.
One area where research has made significant strides
is in asthma. In the past twenty years, new treatments and management
techniques have dramatically improved the quality of life for those
living with asthma. Children who once might have struggled to breathe
are attending school and are active in sports due to new medications
and management protocols.
Unfortunately, despite these historic strides, asthma
has become the leading chronic illness among children. It affects one
in every ten children in Washington state, and the incidence of this
disease is increasing. The American Lung Association® of the Northwest
continues to fight the growing asthma epidemic by advancing the medical
discoveries and supporting those advances with educational programs,
such as asthma camp.
During the summer of 2001, more than 150 children who
have asthma went to asthma camp. They learned how to better manage
their asthma and had a chance to participate in the fun and games of
summer camp. Those who attend asthma camp each year get to take
advantage of our outstanding staff of doctors and nurses who volunteer
their time to provide round-the-clock medical supervision for the
children.
Even with these advances, there is more work to be
done. There is no cure for lung cancer. Effective treatments for
diseases, like emphysema and pulmonary fibrosis, that injure lungs
beyond repair, still elude us. With the help of dedicated scientists
and our volunteers and donors, we'll keep searching for a cure.
1904
The national
American Lung Association®
is formed as the National Association for the Study and Prevention of
Tuberculosis. It is the first volunteer-based health organization in
the United States.
1906
American Lung Association® of Washington, is formed.
1929
The research committee of the national Lung Association researches new
techniques with x-ray machines to diagnose lung disease
1930s
The newly-developed tuberculin test and new
x-ray tests become effective tuberculosis diagnostic tools. Lung
Association buses bring these tests to new areas of the United States.
1944
Dr. Selman Waksman, Rutgers University,
isolates streptomycin - the first effective chemical weapon against
tuberculosis.
1948
The national Lung Association began its medical
research and teaching fellowship awards program. Young physicians and
students receive funding for lung disease-related research projects.
1950s
Dr. Edith Lincoln discovers that isoniazid prevents serious complications of some types of tuberculosis in children.
1956
The medical research grants program is expanded to include research for a greater number of lung diseases.
1959
Dr. May Ellen Avery, an
American Lung Association® research grantee, discovered that the lungs of babies with respiratory distress syndrome lack the fatty substance, surfactant.
1963
One year before the first U.S. Surgeon GeneralÕs report on smoking, the
American Lung Association®
adopts a three-pronged attack on cigarettes: research, information, and
education. The Lung Association is one of the first health
organizations in the United States to work against the alarming rise in
lung diseases due to tobacco use.
1986
After research determines that price increases reduce youth smoking, the
American Lung Association® successfully lobbies Congress to permanently extend the 16-cents-per-pack federal excise tax on cigarettes.
1991
The national Lung Association successfully lobbies Congress to increase
funding for lung research programs at the National Institutes of Health
and to increase funding to support federal tuberculosis control
programs.
1993
Two forms of replacement surfactant therapy for
babies with respiratory distress syndrome are approved by the federal
government. In mid-1993, research indicates a significant drop (28.4%)
in the mortality rate among babies with respiratory distress syndrome.
2001
Research confirms again that price increases reduce youth smoking. The
American Lung Association® of Washington sponsors Initiative 773 - increasing the sales tax on cigarettes by 60 cents per pack.