A passion for helping people
At CHOP, Houser serves families facing a bewildering range of challenges. Sickle cell disease is an inherited blood disorder that causes oxygen-carrying red blood cells—normally round—to become sickle-shaped, which challenges blood flow and creates bottlenecks that can lead to pain, blindness, stroke and other complications.
In the U.S., this disease is most common in the African American community, and funding to increase awareness, improve care and advance research hasn’t kept pace with funding for other diseases.
“I like being an advocate,” Houser said. “I like helping patients find resources, and I like truly getting to know them. I have some kids who I’ve known since they were only weeks old. I jumped into this role not really knowing much about sickle cell, but I was determined to learn and grow. That’s exactly what happened.”