miércoles, 25 de febrero de 2026
We're here to make clinical trials clear and accessible for people living with a condition.
https://trialport.com/
You are not alone
Written by Keith Berlowitz, pRxTrialPort
Exploring how family and friends quietly shape health decisions, emotional resilience and participation in clinical research through care, trust and everyday support
Family and friends, the quiet influence
A rare diagnosis doesn’t just change a life. It changes the entire rhythm of a home. Rare disease creates an invisible shift. Roles change overnight. Family and friends become the unofficial care team, providing support in a number of ways, emotional, admin, advocacy, logistics and filling many other roles. Parents become care coordinators. Partners become protectors and planners. Siblings become early caregivers, sometimes without anyone realising it. True friends become closer than family while others disappear completely. Rare disease doesn’t just happen to one person. It happens to a whole family and often encompasses the wider circle of a person’s whole community.
The diagnosis moment is a before-and-after event for everyone. Even when families feel relieved to finally “have a name for it,” diagnosis often brings many different emotions. Families carry grief, fear and the guilt of “did I miss something?” They feel uncertainty for the future and financial anxiety. They want to provide their loved one with the best care and treatment possible, but they have no idea where to start. The family isn’t just learning a condition; they’re learning a new life.
After diagnosis, the work begins. For many people I have spoken to and for ourselves following my daughter's diagnosis, it was a google search, followed by accessing support groups to learn more. Whilst my daughter’s condition is mild, for many others I have spoken with, caring for their loved one often becomes like a second job because of the combination of the emotional load and the admin load that they willingly take on. Families don’t just support emotionally, they carry a massive invisible workload. Appointments mean taking time off work, finding childcare, travelling and the expenses that go along with it. They sift through insurance paperwork and navigate hospital appointments. They create caregiving schedules, manage information overload and are forced to quickly learn all kinds of medical terminology. This is not only caregiving. It is project management under stress.
Connection matters: community reduces isolation
My experience within varying rare disease communities has shown me that the mental health impact spreads through the family circle. Rare disease stress doesn’t stay contained. Family members and friends can experience chronic anxiety, burnout, relationship strain, loneliness and anticipatory grief. Many supporters feel they must stay strong and don’t ask for support themselves. Supporting the supporters is not optional; it’s part of good care.
A diagnosis can be devastating, but it can also become the moment where people re-organise around love, purpose and problem-solving. Families are asked to bear a heavy load, but through it all, many choose to grow stronger, closer together and become a superpower. They often evolve into advocates, educators, fundraisers, organisers and community builders. Rare disease communities are among the strongest examples of human resilience and collective intelligence. Families do not choose this path, but they can choose how they walk it: together.
One of the biggest harms of rare disease is isolation. Community brings many things to its members: understanding without explanation, shared practical tips, emotional relief, shared language and much more.
Rare Disease Day is observed on the last day of February to raise awareness for rare diseases and improve access to treatment and medical representation for individuals with rare diseases and their families. The date was chosen because in leap years it is February 29, the rarest date. Rare Disease Day is an anchor moment to remind people: “You are not alone.” “Your experience is valid.” “Help exists, even when answers are incomplete.”
Clinical research brings hope
Many families want to do something, not just cope. Clinical research can offer potential access to investigational therapies, progress for the community and meaning and agency, yet the process can be confusing when it is layered on the existing emotional load. As an industry we do not always make it easy to find trials. Trial eligibility is difficult to understand and many times it’s unclear what participation really involves.
When clinical research exists, families should be able to find it easily and understand it clearly. Platforms like pRxTrialPort are built to support that journey, helping people explore options without pressure and with clarity at the centre. At pRxEngage Inc (the company behind the platform) we strongly believe trials are one of many options and families deserve decision support, not pressure. The platform’s primary goal is to give back agency and to help families move from overwhelm to clarity to informed choice.
If you or someone you love is navigating a rare disease and wants to explore what research options may exist, take a moment to look. Not to commit. Not to decide. Just to understand. Clarity is often the first step toward feeling less alone.
The rare disease journey is deeply personal, but it should never feel lonely. This Rare Disease Day, check in on someone living with a rare disease. Ask them “How are you really?” and listen on purpose. Offer practical help for rides, meals or other admin tasks. Just being there for them can make a huge impact.
Suscribirse a:
Enviar comentarios (Atom)


No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario