What is RUN’s NBA Initiative?
In 2018, the Milwaukee Bucks and the Utah Jazz honored our RUN families. We had over 100 tickets for the game with the Utah Jazz last March!
The night I stood on the court with my three children was a moment in time I will cherish for the rest of my life.
RUN families were treated to the Utah Jazz vs Milwaukee Bucks game on January 7, 2019. The Jazz family donated 6 lower bowl seats! This past fall we also donated several of our lower bowl tickets to RUN families and to our RUN supporters.
The very first family we hosted for a Jazz game was the Might family
Ava, Oskar, Lucy and I are all living with an undiagnosed rare disease. Our family has traveled the country in search of a diagnosis, a treatment and a cure. Unfortunately, our diagnostic odyssey has taken a lot of joy from our lives. When my husband, Justin Zanik, accepted the job as Assistant General Manager with the Utah Jazz in the fall of 2013, our lives immediately changed for the better. When we attended their games, our pain and our sadness faded into the background. Although, I must admit that Oskar is not able to sit in the arena and watch the games due to his sensory issues. He is still the biggest Jazz fan! He has a wall in his room full of the posters Justin brings him after every home game!
He knows every single player’s stats and loves to cheer them on from home. It is a very special moment for Oskar when he gets to stand on the court for the National Anthem. I know he is hurting but he stands there so proud to be a part of the Utah Jazz family. For us girls, we cheer! We laugh! We have a lot of fun! We wanted to bring the joy of the NBA to all of our rare and undiagnosed families.
I recently thought about why the NBA plays such a huge part in the lives of our rare and undiagnosed families.
It’s an honor to play in the NBA. You have to work hard and be more dedicated to anything in the world to be a success in the NBA. Just as a young boy or young girl picks up a basketball and learns how to dribble and shoot, we learn how to be an expert playing the game of rare and undiagnosed. Our skills are much different. However, we wake up every day and persevere just like a player does on the court. Our court is the four walls of a hospital room, emergency room, school, work or our home. When I look at the pictures over the past five years, I think of our RUN families as our All-Star team standing on the court with the inspiring NBA players.
NBA Initiative Goals:
Create awareness of rare & undiagnosed diseases
Build community
Connect families with doctors and really cool basketball players
Have fun
Enjoy the great game of basketball
If you would like to be on the court on March 2nd, please reach out! Please share with us what it would mean to you and your family to be on the court for the National Anthem with the Jazz! Contact information is below.
A special thank you to everyone involved in the NBA that helps to bring RUN’s NBA Initiative to our families.
A very special thank you to the Larry H. Miller family and our Utah Jazz family for bringing our dream to reality.
Much love, Gina
We have had up to thirty children and their families (total of 100 people) stand on the court as National Anthem buddies during the National Anthem.
We have had up to 150 tickets donated for rare families to attend the game
We have had a KJZZ video made about the rare community and Rare Disease Day®, which aired during the game as well as on their NBA website
We have had a page in the Game Night Program supporting
We have had a PSA during the game supporting
We have had a family honored during half-time
We have had a table in the arena
We have had a skybox donated for the families to watch the game, which helps with handicap access and builds togetherness
MediaPlanet: The NBA Pairs up with a Grassroots Nonprofit for Rare Diseases
NBA Article on Hosting our Utah Rare Children on the court
Sugar House City Journal: Children with rare diseases enjoy Utah Jazz game
Deseret News about rare kids on the court of the NBA Utah Jazz
Jazz News: 30 Rare Children Tonight Game 2015
Salt Lake Tribune article on Ava and our family moving to Salt Lake City and the Utah Jazz
Rare Disease Day is February 28th
Undiagnosed Rare Disease Day is April 29th
Rare Disease Facts and Figures:
There are over 7,000 distinct types of rare diseases
In the United States, a disease is defined as rare when it affects less than 200,000 at any given time
Rare diseases affect 1 in 10 people, more than 350 million people worldwide
Approximately 50% of the people affected by Rare Disease are children
30% of children with rare disease will not live to see their 5th birthday
There are more Americans who live with a rare disease than ALL of those who have either HIV, Heart Disease or Stroke.
95% of rare diseases are without an FDA approved treatment or therapy.
Those 5% with FDA treatment still struggle with accessing it due to high costs and variability.
Families & private foundations provide about 3% of ALL medical research funding in the U.S.
RUN stands for the Rare & Undiagnosed Network. We’re a group of advocates, patients, families, researchers, and healthcare providers who share the same mission and vision: To empower rare and undiagnosed patients and their families with genomic information and community through advocacy, networking and support.
Contact information:
Gina Szajnuk (Zanik)
Co-founder and Executive Director
E: ginaszajnuk@gmail.com
C: (310) 883-4353
To Read: “What is the hardest part of being undiagnosed?” by Gina Szajnuk
To Read: “Undiagnosed is a Diagnosis” by Ava and Gina Szajnuk
To Read: The Szajnuk Journey