Calgary family pushes for awareness about juvenile arthritis - Action News
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Calgary family pushes for awareness about juvenile arthritis

A Calgary family wants people to know arthritis doesn't just affect the elderly in Alberta, three out of 1,000 kids have it too.

National puppet show travelled to Calgary to educate students

Elizabeth Devens and her son, Jason. (Helen Pike/CBC )

A Calgary family wants people to know arthritis doesn't just affect the elderly in Alberta, about three out of 1,000 kids have joint inflammationtoo.

Elizabeth Devens's five-year-old son, Jason, has juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). She also had JIA, and she's pushing for more awareness.

"Arthritis isn't something that people typically think of as something affecting small children. It's more something that they think of old people get.This can be debilitating pain that is affecting little kids, and it shouldn't be," she said.

"[Jason] didn't just have the joint issues, he had inflammation in his eye,and that can cause vision loss, which is scary, especially for a five-year-old."

She is sharing their story as a national charity holds puppet shows in Calgary to raise awareness about juvenile arthritis. Devens said groups like Cassie and Friends, who travelled to 10 Calgary-area elementary schools with its puppet show, are a great way to get information out.

But she also wants change in other areas. Jason had to start treatment with a drug called Humira an injection so painful Devens says they had to stop using it despite there being aversion of the drug available in the U.S. that the manufacturer says is less painful because it doesn't contain citrate, a citric acid derivative.

"There's lots of parents that are really fighting to get that into Canada," Devens said.

"The treatment shouldn't be painful. The treatment shouldn't be as bad as the disease."

Dr. Nadia Luca of the Alberta Childrens Hospital. (Ellis Choe/CBC )

Dr. Nadia Luca of the Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute says the citrate-free formulation of Humira has been approved by Health Canada, but has not yet been marketed within the country.

"Looking into that a bit further it's not entirely clear if and when the citrate-free formulation will be available for use in Canada," she said.

"It is frustrating because particularly in our pediatric patients, painful injections can be difficult to administer and cause quite a lot of stress and anxiety for the family as a whole."

She said doctors are currently unsure what the exact cause of JIA is, but they do know it's a condition that affects the immune system.

With files from Helen Pike