Contra Costa County Header
File #: RES 2025-42    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Consent Resolution Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 2/18/2025 In control: BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
On agenda: 2/25/2025 Final action:
Title: ADOPT Resolution No. 2025-42 proclaiming February 28, 2025 as Rare Disease Day, as recommended by Supervisor Gioia.
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To: Board of Supervisors
From: John Gioia, District I Supervisor
Report Title: In the matter of proclaiming February 28th, 2025 as Rare Disease Day.
?Recommendation of the County Administrator ? Recommendation of Board Committee


RECOMMENDATIONS:
ADOPT Resolution proclaiming February 28, 2025 as Rare Disease Day.

FISCAL IMPACT:
None.

BACKGROUND:
See Resolution.

CONSEQUENCE OF NEGATIVE ACTION:
N/A















The Board of Supervisors of Contra Costa County, California
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IN THE MATTER OF Proclaiming February 28th 2025 Rare Disease Day

WHEREAS, there are nearly 7,000 diseases and conditions considered rare (each affecting fewer than 200,000 Americans) in the United States, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH); and

WHEREAS, while each of these diseases may affect small numbers of people, rare diseases as a group affect almost 30 million Americans; and

WHEREAS, many rare diseases are serious and debilitating conditions that have a significant impact on the lives of those affected; and

WHEREAS, while more than 450 drugs and biologics have been approved for the treatment of rare diseases according to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), millions of Americans still have rare diseases for which there is no approved treatment; and

WHEREAS, individuals and families affected by rare diseases often experience problems such as diagnosis delay, difficulty finding a medical expert, and lack of access to treatments or ancillary services; and

WHEREAS, while the public is familiar with some rare diseases such as "Lou Gehrig's disease" and sympathetic to those affected, many patients and families affected by less widely known rare diseases like Kennedy's Disease, bear a large share of the burden of funding research and raising public awareness to support the search for treatments; and

WHERAS, thousands of residents of Contra Costa County are among those affected by rare diseases since nearly one in 10 Americans have rare diseases; and

WHEREAS...

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