 |  | | Camp Provides Sickle Cell Patients with New Hope ATLANTA (August 2, 2010) – More than 150 students will spend six days at Camp New Hope, a recreational and educational experience designed for children ages 6 to 17, who have sickle cell disease. From Sunday, August 1st until Friday, August 6th, the residential camp provides children an opportunity to come together to participate in interactive learning experiences such as boating, canoeing, hiking, horseback riding, and arts and crafts in a medically supervised camping environment at Camp Twin Lakes located in Rutledge, Georgia. Learn more... |
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Click here for a Calendar of Events ↓ National Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month The observance originated in 1975... Read More | The Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia and its programs is sustained entirely by the generosity of its donors as well as dedicated volunteers. Click Here↓ |  | Coming Soon!
|  | What do your Results Mean? Sickle Cell Anemia, Sickle Cell Trait, and other hemoglobin variants can be identified by special laboratory test. These tests identify hemoglobin, which is the substance inside red blood cells. Learn more... | Looking for Volunteer Opportunities? The Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia, Inc. couldn’t do without you! Helping hands are needed for many different programs and opportunities. Click here to enroll |
 |  | | Breaking the Sickle Cell Cycle through Knowledge, Help and Hope. Since 1971, the Sickle Cell Foundation of Georgia, Inc. has stood as a bastion of hope for victims of Sickle Cell and other hemoglobin abnormalities. Dr. Delutha H. King, Jr. and the late Dr. Nelson McGhee, Jr. founded the organization to monitor Sickle Cell occurrences, share and advance knowledge and research with other organizations and, of course, improve the quality of life of those battling the disease. Learn more... |
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