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Showing posts from September 30, 2024

Driving Change: Road Scholar’s Awareness Trucks Spotlight Critical Causes This October

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Road Scholar Transport is showcasing its dedication to raising awareness for several important causes this October with five specially designed awareness trucks.   Here's a closer look at the causes: Down Syndrome: There are three types of Down syndrome:   Trisomy 21 (the most common, consisting of about 95% of cases in which there is an extra chromosome 21 in every cell), Translocation (around 3% where the additional chromosome is attached to another instead of on its own), and Mosaicism (around 2%, in which only some cells contain the extra chromosome).   Each year, around 1 in 640 babies (or less than 1%) are born with this. There are certain physical features that Down syndrome individuals have in common including slanted eyes, short neck, absence of a nasal bone, small ears, a protruding tongue, short stature, white spots in the colored part of the eyes, weak muscle tone, and a single crease on the palm of the hand.   There are certain conditions that people w

Down Syndrome Awareness Truck Spreads the Word That Love Doesn’t Count Chromosomes

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I first started working for Road Scholar over a decade ago.   Since day one, I was always taken back by the company’s awareness program , started years ago by our founding President Jim Barrett.   I’ve interviewed and written about each trailer as it came onboard, never realizing that someday I’d be sharing my own story. It was always a dream of mine to have a baby of my own and having undergone two surgeries for severe endometriosis, was told that there was a chance I wouldn’t be able to, so I was extremely excited to find out that I was pregnant with my first child in 2021.   I’ll never forget the day that I went in for my 10-week ultrasound and was told that something was wrong…fluid was detected on the back of the baby’s neck and I needed to immediately see a high risk doctor that day.   Hearing this, I passed out, facing every mother’s nightmare, that their child was in danger.   After a Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS) test, in which a needle is inserted into the uterus,