Inspiring Grassroots Fundraising

March 28, 20264 min read

What Grassroots Fundraising Can Do: A Lesson from Cystic Fibrosis and a Call to the Endometriosis Community

Many hands, light work

There are moments in history when ordinary people decide they are no longer willing to wait.

They look at the suffering in front of them. They look at the lack of answers. And instead of accepting it, they build something.

That is exactly what happened with cystic fibrosis.

The Cystic Fibrosis Story

In the 1950s, children born with cystic fibrosis rarely lived long enough to attend elementary school. Families were told there was little that could be done.

But parents did not accept that.

They organized. They fundraised. They told their stories. And in 1955, they helped launch theCystic Fibrosis Foundation.

What happened next is one of the most powerful examples of grassroots impact in modern medicine.

Over decades, this community raised billions of dollars and funded targeted, strategic research. That investment directly contributed to breakthrough therapies, including drugs likeTrikafta, which address the underlying cause of the disease for many patients.

Today, the median predicted survival age for people with cystic fibrosis in the United States is over 50 years. That is a dramatic increase from childhood mortality just a few generations ago.

This did not happen by accident.

It happened because a community decided to act.

Why This Matters for Endometriosis

Endometriosis affects an estimated 1 in 10 women. It is a systemic inflammatory disease that can impact every part of the body. Yet it remains underfunded and under-researched compared to its prevalence and burden.

Many women wait years for a diagnosis. Many undergo multiple surgeries. Many are told their pain is normal.

We see this every day.

And it raises a question we cannot ignore.

What if we stopped waiting for the system to fix this and started building something together?

Grassroots Movements That Changed Medicine

The cystic fibrosis story is not the only example.

There is a pattern here.

HIV and AIDS Activism

In the 1980s and 1990s, patient advocates organized through groups likeACT UP. They demanded faster drug approval, better research funding, and inclusion in clinical trials.

Their advocacy reshaped how clinical trials are conducted and accelerated access to life-saving treatments.

Today, HIV is a manageable chronic condition for many people. That transformation was driven in part by grassroots pressure and funding.

Breast Cancer Advocacy

Grassroots campaigns helped turn breast cancer into one of the most funded areas of medical research. Organizations likeSusan G. Komen Foundationmobilized millions of people through awareness campaigns and fundraising events.

That visibility translated into increased federal funding, improved screening, and better treatment options.

ALS and the Ice Bucket Challenge

In 2014, a simple social media campaign changed everything.

TheALS Ice Bucket Challengeraised over 100 million dollars for theALS Associationin a matter of months.

According to the ALS Association, those funds contributed to identifying new ALS-related genes and advancing research pipelines.

A global movement started with individuals sharing a video and inviting others to join.

What These Stories Have in Common

These movements look different on the surface, but they share the same foundation.

They were built by people who were directly affected.

They told their stories.

They invited others in.

They gave what they could.

And over time, those small actions added up to something powerful.

The Opportunity in Front of Us

This is exactly why we created the Endo Research Alliance. (Endoresearchalliance.org)

We believe that no single organization can solve this alone. But together, we can begin to fund the kind of research that leads to real answers. And the timeline is shrinking due to what we have learned with cancer research. And now AI speeds research outcomes exponentially. That spells HOPE! Miracles are closer than we think!

Join us as a partner, please. There is no minimum donation.

There is no barrier to entry.

There is simply an invitation.

To be part of something that matters.

To help fund research that could change the future for millions of women.

To turn frustration into action.

A Final Thought

We are not comparing diseases. Every condition carries its own burden, its own story, and its own urgency.

But we can learn from what has worked.

Cystic fibrosis did not become a story of progress because the system suddenly changed.

It became a story of progress because people changed it.

And that same opportunity is in front of us now.


References and Notes

  • Cystic Fibrosis Foundationpatient registry reports and historical data

  • Trikaftaapproval and outcomes reported by Vertex Pharmaceuticals and peer reviewed studies

  • ALS Associationreports on Ice Bucket Challenge impact

  • NIH and CDC data on HIV treatment advancements and breast cancer funding trends

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