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Home :: About CPIRF


      

CPI Research Foundation (CPIRF)

The United Cerebral Palsy Foundation (UCPA) was founded in 1948 by Leonard and Isabelle Weinstein Goldenson and by Jack and Ethel Hausman, because there was inadequate health care available to the thousands of babies and children with birth defects.

In 1955, the same founding families of UCP created the UCP Research and Educational Foundation, Inc, (UCPREF) now known as Cerebral Palsy International Research Foundation (CPIRF).

The mission of the Research Foundation was 3-fold: to fund research (for cure, care and best practices), to advocate for more Federal support for research relevant to developmental disabilities, and to foster superb educational programs in medical schools so that the next generation of children with developmental impairments would have knowledgeable doctors, nurses and therapists prepared to care for them.

In its 50 year history, UCPREF has been instrumental in contributing to the elimination of several causes of cerebral palsy: German measles, kernicterus, and maternal – fetal blood type incompatibility. While these discoveries were significant, the number of new cases of cerebral palsy has increased 25% over the last decade to societal changes such as improved survival of premature infants and increased numbers of multiple births due to fertility treatments; there are an estimated 10,000 new cases of cerebral palsy each year. And yet… public funding for CP research is decreasing.

Although the causes of developmental disorders have changed, and our ability to care for and improve the quality and length of life of those with cerebral palsy, research is more important than ever, and the CPIRF mission remains the same.

CPIRF provides financial support to rigorously reviewed, scientifically important research relevant to cerebral palsy and other developmental disabilities. CPIRF also provides medical expertise as requested by other organizations. CPIRF serves as a resource for the international public, clinicians and policy-makers about best health care practices, prevention and curative strategies for cerebral palsy.

UCPREF is also focusing its attention on research directed at issues of early diagnosis, mechanisms of nervous system injury and repair, neurological rehabilitation, orthopedic rehabilitation and engineering solutions as well as research to prevent the secondary neuromuscular, musculoskeletal and cardiovascular complications seen in adults with cerebral palsy.

There are over 1 million children and adults in the USA with cerebral palsy and related developmental disabilities, more clinical and basic biomedical research is urgently needed for improving neurological functions, preventing medical complications, and optimizing quality of life in these individuals from infancy through adulthood.

 


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