logo
North Texas family raising awareness of muscular dystrophy struggles

North Texas family raising awareness of muscular dystrophy struggles

CBS News4 hours ago

With his face focused on the screen, Brandon Hale's fingers moved like lightning as he created masterpieces in Minecraft.
"I'm currently building a house," the typically shy 16-year-old said when gently asked. "Took me two years to get good."
He is bright and funny, but Brandon's body is slowly betraying him. He was diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy at age 5.
Family remembers the day everything changed
"I can remember the day he got diagnosed," said his older sister, Emily. "I can remember sitting on the stairs while my mom was on the phone with the doctor, and then the air in the room — the air disappeared from the room the second we kind of found out."
Duchenne is a severe form of muscular dystrophy caused by the body's inability to produce dystrophin, a protein essential for muscle health. Over time, all muscles — legs, arms, lungs, and heart — deteriorate.
CBS News Texas
Living in the moment, despite the odds
"We just try to take it one day at a time and do the best we can and enjoy every day," said Brandon's mother, Margaret Hale. "Because I know when you think about the big picture — that it's a degenerative disease and it's going to cost him his life at some point."
Still, Margaret refuses to lose hope.
"But you never know. I mean, you don't have tomorrow necessarily," she said. "So, you've got to make the best of what you've got right now."
Father's health adds to family's burden
Even "right now" is hard. Brandon's father, Eric Hale, is in a Denton rehab hospital. A few weeks ago, he woke up with a swollen foot. It led to a below-the-knee amputation due to complications from diabetes.
"I just want to bring awareness to it — the struggles, the everyday struggles," Eric said.
And not just his own, but Brandon's and those of other families navigating this disease. Eric and Margaret both grew up watching the Jerry Lewis Labor Day MDA telethon. When it ended in 2014, he said, much of the awareness disappeared—but the disease did not.
Financial strain and lack of support
"You know, most people probably think we get assistance, and we don't," Eric said. "The only time we've ever gotten help was when he first started taking the steroids. If we had to pay for them every month until we hit our deductible, they'd be almost $5,000 a month."
Eric said he speaks for "all the families falling through the cracks of a broken system" — earning too much to qualify for significant assistance, but not enough to meet their son's growing needs.
"We've drained our savings. We've drained our retirement," he said. "Just to provide for my kids. And again, it's a struggle every single day. I want — both my kids — but to make his life as comfortable as possible for as long as he's got."
A father's love and unspoken fears
Eric called his teenage son "my hero."
"Both my kids are. But the strength that that little boy has..." His voice quivered. "We haven't talked about it. But I'm smart enough to know that he's done his own research on it. I have no doubt. But we've never had that conversation with him because I can't."
He paused, overcome with emotion.
Home not built for disability
The emotional toll must wait. Each day, the Hales face practical challenges, like a home that isn't accessible.
"The doorways are just not wide enough for him to even get through in the wheelchair," Margaret said. "A roll-in shower for him. And then, just maybe widening some of the doorways to help make it easier to get him in and out. Those are the real major things we would want to have done if we could."
Family sacrifices to stay together
So, day to day, they do the best they can.
Margaret, who built a career in education, is now a full-time caregiver and homeschool teacher. She's looking for a part-time, remote job to help support the family.
Emily was accepted into Texas Tech but is postponing that dream to stay home and help.
"I mean, that's my family," Emily said. "I would do anything for them. So if that means me working the next couple of years of my life, I mean, it's not the end of the world to try to figure out what's next while still being here for them."
Focusing on today, not tomorrow
Even if "what's next" is simply enduring the "right now."
"I don't think about 10 years from now," Eric said. "I think about a month from now, two weeks from now, tomorrow. That's all I can do."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Experts issue warning over dangerous new insect species spreading across US: 'Managing them is not easy'
Experts issue warning over dangerous new insect species spreading across US: 'Managing them is not easy'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Experts issue warning over dangerous new insect species spreading across US: 'Managing them is not easy'

An invasive tick species from Asia is quickly multiplying across the eastern United States, and according to Patch, it's prompting concern from environmental officials. The Asian longhorned tick, first identified in the U.S. in 2017, has now been found in at least 17 states and is spreading particularly fast in southeastern Pennsylvania, where cases have surged by 150% over the last five years. Unlike most ticks, the Asian longhorned tick doesn't need a mate to reproduce. One female can lay up to 3,000 eggs, resulting in infestations so dense that wildlife officials have found hundreds of ticks on a single animal. "Managing them is not easy because of how numerous they are and how easily they can come back," Risa Pesapane, a preventive medicine professor at Ohio State University, said, per Patch. Luckily, there's no strong evidence linking these ticks to Lyme disease. However, their ability to transmit other illnesses, including a cattle disease called Theileria orientalis that causes severe anemia and fever, poses an urgent threat to food supply chains and native animal populations. Their rapid spread also puts pressure on local ecosystems. Asian longhorned ticks feed on a wide range of animals, from deer and raccoons to dogs, cats, cattle, and even squirrels and skunks. With their capacity for rapid growth and adaptability to mild, humid conditions, experts warn that they could eventually populate much of the eastern U.S. and parts of the West Coast. Invasions like this destroy biodiversity by outcompeting native tick species and disrupting predator-prey relationships that keep nature in balance. In a world already struggling with rising temperatures and shrinking habitats, the introduction of yet another aggressive species threatens to worsen existing issues. According to Patch, experts say prevention and early action are key. Pesticides can work, but only when applied directly. Even then, ticks often bounce back. The best approach is to keep pastures mowed, regularly check pets and livestock, and report sightings to local health officials. If you find a tick on you, store it in rubbing alcohol and contact your doctor or county health office. For pets and livestock, get in touch with your vet immediately. Perhaps most importantly, support efforts to protect native ecosystems. The more resilient our local wildlife and natural habitats are, the harder it is for invasive species to take hold. Should the government be able to control how we heat our homes? Definitely Only if it saves money I'm not sure No way Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.

Community collaboration crucial in addressing homelessness in Abilene
Community collaboration crucial in addressing homelessness in Abilene

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Community collaboration crucial in addressing homelessness in Abilene

ABILENE, Texas () – Young professionals gathered at the Community Foundation of Abilene for an 'Abi Chat' during the Abilene Young Professionals luncheon. Networking took a purposeful turn to address homelessness through collaboration with the West Texas Homeless Network. The West Texas Homeless Network (WTHN) is a coalition of organizations dedicated to advocating for action that realigns systems and resources to end homelessness in Abilene, rather than merely managing it. The WTHN is neither a non-profit nor a for-profit organization; instead, it focuses on helping communities prevent and eliminate homelessness through collaboration and strategic planning. The Executive Director of Abilene Hope Haven shared why events like this are important in keeping the conversation with the public and continuing to address the needs of the Big Country Homeless community. 'We have a great network of people. We always are going to need to fill different gaps, depending on what's going on in the climate of our community. But we have a wealth of providers in the network that are really good at doing a holistic approach to those experiencing homelessness,' Horton shared. Horton says the Abilene community's wealth of resources and willingness to work together are its strengths. Whether a person needs help with mental health, food insecurity, substance abuse, or any number of issues that homeless neighbors face, the network is ready and willing to step in. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Forget 'biological age' tests — longevity experts are using an $800 under-the-radar blood test to measure aging in real-time
Forget 'biological age' tests — longevity experts are using an $800 under-the-radar blood test to measure aging in real-time

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Forget 'biological age' tests — longevity experts are using an $800 under-the-radar blood test to measure aging in real-time

Doctors and scientists are using a blood plasma test to study longevity. The test measures proteins and can tell you about your organ health. This field of proteomics could one day help detect diseases like cancer before they start. Should you have that second cup of coffee? How about a little wine with dinner? And, is yogurt really your superfood? Scientists are getting closer to offering consumers a blood test that could help people make daily decisions about how to eat, drink, and sleep that are more perfectly tailored to their unique biology. The forthcoming tests could also help shape what are arguably far more important health decisions, assessing whether your brain is aging too fast, if your kidneys are OK, or if that supplement or drug you're taking is actually doing any good. It's called an organ age test, more officially (and scientifically) known as "proteomics" — and it's the next hot "biological age" marker that researchers are arguing could be better than all the rest. "If I could just get one clock right now, I'd want to get that clock, and I'd like to see it clinically available in older adults," cardiologist Eric Topol, author of the recent bestseller "Super Agers: An Evidence-Based Approach to Longevity," told Business Insider. Topol said armed with organ age test results, people could become more proactive stewards of their own health, before it's too late. "When we have all these layers of data, it's a whole new day for preventing the disease," Topol said. "You see the relationship with women's hormones. You see the relationship with food and alcohol. You don't ever get that with genes." A test like this isn't available to consumers just yet, but it's already being used by researchers at elite universities and high-end longevity clinics. They hope it can become a tool any doctor could use to assess patient health in the next few years. A startup called Vero, which was spun out of some foundational proteomics research at Stanford University, is hoping to beta test a proteomics product for consumers this year. "Knowing your oldest organ isn't the point; changing the trajectory is," Vero co-founder and CEO Paul Coletta told a crowd gathered at the Near Future Summit in Malibu, California, last month. Coletta told Business Insider Vero's not interested in doing "wealthcare." The company plans to make its test available to consumers for around $200 a pop, at scale. Their draw only requires one vial of blood. The big promise of proteomics is that it could be a more precise real-time tool for tracking important but subtle changes that emerge inside each of us as we age. Genetic testing can measure how our bodies are built, spotting vulnerabilities in a person's DNA that might predispose them to health issues. Standard clinical measurements like a person's weight, blood pressure, or cholesterol readings are a useful proxy for potential health issues. Then there are the increasingly popular "biological age" tests available to consumers at home. Most of those look at "epigenetic changes" — how environmental factors affect our gene expression. Proteomics does something different and new. It measures the product that our bodies make based on all those genetic and environmental inputs: proteins. It offers a live assessment of how your body is running, not just how it's programmed. If validated in the next few years, these tests could become key in early disease detection and prevention. They could help influence all kinds of medical decisions, from big ones like "What drugs should I take?" to little ones like "How does my body respond to caffeine or alcohol?" Some high-end longevity clinics are already forging ahead using proteomics to guide clinical recommendations, albeit cautiously. Dr. Evelyne Bischof, a longevity physician who treats patients worldwide, said she uses proteomic information to guide some of the lifestyle interventions she recommends to her patients. She may suggest a more polyphenol-rich diet to someone who seems to have high inflammation and neuroinflammation based on proteomic test results, or may even suggest they do a little more cognitive training, based on what proteomics says about how their brain is aging. Dr. Andrea Maier, a professor of medicine and functional aging at the National University of Singapore, told BI she uses this measurement all the time in her longevity clinics. For her, it's just a research tool, but if the results of her ongoing studies are decent, she hopes to be able to use it clinically in a few years' time. "We want to know what kind of 'ageotype' a person is, so what type of aging personality are you, not from a mental perspective, but from a physical perspective," Maier said. "It's really discovery at this moment in time, and at the edge of being clinically meaningful." "Once we have that validated tool, we will just add it to our routine testing and we can just tick the box and say, 'I also want to know if this person is a cardiac ager, or a brain ager, or a muscle ager' because now we have a sensitive parameter — protein — which can be added," Maier said. The two big-name proteomics tests are Olink and SOMAscan. For now, their high-end screening costs around $400-$800 per patient. "I'm losing lots of money at the moment because of proteomics for clinical research!" Maier said. Top aging researchers at Stanford and Harvard are pushing the field forward, racing to publish more novel insights about the human proteome. The latest findings from Harvard aging researcher Vadim Gladyshev's lab, published earlier this year, suggest that as we age, each person may even stand to benefit from a slightly different antiaging grocery list. To research this idea, Gladyshev looked at proteins in the blood of more than 50,000 people in the UK, all participants in the UK Biobank who are being regularly tested and studied to learn more about their long-term health. He tracked their daily habits and self-reported routines like diet, occupation, and prescriptions, comparing those details to how each patient's organs were aging. He discovered some surprising connections. Yogurt eating, generally speaking, tended to be associated with better intestinal aging but had relatively no benefit to the arteries. White wine drinking, on the other hand, seemed to potentially confer some small benefit to the arteries while wreaking havoc on the gut. "The main point is that people age in different ways in different organs, and therefore we need to find personalized interventions that would fit that particular person," Gladyshev told BI. "Through measuring proteins, you assess the age of different organs and you say, 'OK, this person is old in this artery.'" For now, there's too much noise in the data to do more. Dr. Pal Pacher, a senior investigator at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism who studies organ aging and injuries, told BI that proteomics is simply not ready for clinical use yet. There's just too much noise in the data. But he imagines a future where a more sophisticated protein clock could help link up which people may be most vulnerable to diseases like early cancer, kidney disease, and more. (A California-based proteomics company called Seer announced last weekend that it is partnering with Korea University to study whether proteomics can help more quickly diagnose cancer in young people in their 20s and 30s.) "How beautiful could it be in the future?" Maier said. "Instead of three hours of clinical investigation, I would have a tool which guides me much, much better, with more validity towards interventions." Read the original article on Business Insider

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store