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Vitilgo Support & Awareness
  1. Signatures
    32 out of 100
    Petitioning
    1. The President of the United States (+ 8 others)
      Petitioning
      close
      • The President of the United States
      • The U.S. Senate
      • The U.S. House of Representatives
      • Your Governor
      • Your State Senate
      • Your State House
      • Radio Announcer (CA) (Shalonda Dartis)
      • AVRF Founder/President (Stella Pavlides)
      • AVRF Founder of Delaware Chapter Leader (Barbara Summers)
  2. Created By
    Barbara Summers
    Dover, DE

Vitiligo is a condition in which your skin loses melanin, the pigment that determines the color of your skin, hair and eyes. If the cells that produce melanin die or no longer form melanin, slowly growing white patches of irregular shapes appear on your skin.

Vitiligo usually starts as small areas of pigment loss that spread and become larger with time. These changes in your skin can result in stress and worries about your appearance.

There is no cure for vitiligo. The goal of treatment is to stop or slow the progression of depigmentation and, if you desire, attempt to return some color to your skin.

Vitiligo: (vit·i·li·go) Vitiligo is a skin condition of white patches resulting from loss of pigment. Any part of the body may be affected. Melanin, the pigment that determines color of skin, hair, and eyes, is produced in cells called melanocytes. If these cells die or cannot form melanin, the skin becomes lighter or completely white. Affected skin is particularly sensitive to sunlight.

The main sign of vitiligo is pigment loss that produces milky-white patches (depigmentation) on your skin. Other less common signs may include: Premature whitening or graying of the hair on your scalp, eyelashes, eyebrows or beard Loss of color in the tissues that line the inside of your mouth (mucous membranes) Loss or change in color of the inner layer of your eye (retina)

Although any part of your body may be affected by vitiligo, depigmentation usually first develops on sun-exposed areas of your skin, such as your hands, feet, arms, face and lips. Vitiligo generally appears in one of three patterns: Focal. Depigmentation is limited to one or a few areas of your body. Segmental. Loss of skin color occurs on only one side of your body. Generalized. Pigment loss is widespread across many parts your body.

Although it can start at any age, vitiligo often first appears between the ages of 20 and 30. The white patches may begin on your face above your eyes or on your neck, armpits, elbows, genitalia, hands or knees. They're often symmetrical and can spread over your entire body. The disorder affects both sexes and all races equally.

Most people with vitiligo are otherwise healthy and have normal skin texture and sensation. However, the condition may be more common in people with certain autoimmune diseases - diseases in which your immune system reacts against your body's own organs or tissues - such as Addison's disease, vitamin B-12 deficiency anemia (pernicious anemia), or thyroid disorders, including hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism.

The natural course of vitiligo is difficult to predict. Sometimes the patches stop forming without treatment. In other cases, pigment loss can involve most of the surface of your skin.

Recent Signatures

Vitiligo

Dear Mr. President and First Lady Obama,

Vitiligo is a disease that effects people worldwide by stripping color from an individual’s skin leaving two colors, white and the person’s natural color, or sometimes completely stripping color leaving only white.  Vitiligo is an autoimmune disease and it does not discriminate.  It is an acquired disease and can strike anyone at any time.  Vitiligo does not kill physically, but it can destroy a person’s self-esteem, especially children living with the disease.

There are AVRF Chapters nationwide.  Each year we hold an AVRF Seminar where families from all parts of the United States attend.  We have Vitiligo researchers and dermatologists speaking on what research and treatments are presently available.  We also have special events for the children where they can all be together and support one another and talk about their lives and some of the experiences they face on a daily basis.  Most of our children endure verbal abuse because of their differences.  Their stories are heart wrenching and many children are treated very cruelly

In 1998, Mrs. Pavlides wrote a Proclamation for Vitiligo Awareness and submitted it to their former Governor, Lawton Chiles, Jr.  I was pleasantly surprised we were surprised when he signed the Proclamation on behalf of the AVRF.  Going forward, Governor Jeb Bush annually signed a Proclamation on behalf of the AVRF designating the month of April as Vitiligo Awareness Month for the State of Florida; and since his retirement, we have been blessed that the present Governor, Charlie Crist, Jr., has continued to do so as well.

The Foundation has received many requests from Vitiligo sufferers as well as their family members nationwide asking the AVRF to support their efforts with their state governors to declare July as Vitiligo Awareness Month.  I am writing on their behalf and am asking you to sign the enclosed Proclamation in order to help education people about Vitiligo and alleviate much of the emotional stress everyone with this life altering skin disorder faces

Thank you for your interest and support for the millions of Americans living with Vitiligo every day.

Sincerely,

[Your name]