The
Mission and History of
Respiratory Care Week
Mission of Respiratory
Care Week
- Honor and thank respiratory
care professionals for their contributions
- Demonstrate the value of
respiratory care professionals in all healthcare settings
- Promote respiratory health
in the workplace and the community
- Increase awareness of lung
health issues in all environments
- Educate and encourage prospective
students about career opportunities and growth of the profession
History
of Respiratory Care Week
Although it had already been an annual local and regional event throughout
the country for several years, National Respiratory Therapy Week truly
became an official national event in 1982 when executives and officers
of the American Association for Respiratory Therapy (AART) visited the
White House (see story below).
Reagan
proclaims National RT Week
(Headline from AARC Times, December 1982)
National Respiratory
Therapy Week, Nov. 7–13, has come and gone, and with it many local and
statewide activities in celebration of that fact.
On a national
scale, however, the most noteworthy activity preceded National RT Week,
and was in fact an official recognition of RT Week by President Ronald
Reagan. Attending the meeting in the Oval Office were 1982 and 1983
AART Presidents John Walton and Glen Gee and Executive Director Sam
Giordano, along with RT Dean Sterling from Washington, DC. Two children
afflicted with respiratory ailments accompanied the group—seven-year-old
Casey Gee, Glen Gee’s asthmatic son, and five-year-old John Magbie,
a youngster in the care of Sterling and other RTs at Children’s Hospital
Medical Center. Young Magbie has been paralyzed from the neck down since
he fractured a vertebra in a school bus accident in 1981. A mechanical
ventilator is housed beneath the seat of his wheelchair.
The trip to
the White House marked an historic event for the AART and the declaration
of National Respiratory Therapy Week is a statement that respiratory
therapy practitioners are making an important contribution to the delivery
of quality health care in the nation.
In 1986, AART became the American
Association for Respiratory Care (AARC) and RT Week became National Respiratory
Care Week—now better known as RC Week. Since then, the national event
in honor of respiratory care professionals has steadily grown to reach
all 50 states in the U.S. and beyond.
And in 2003, lung health awareness
was escalated even further with the establishment of Lung Health Day,
celebrated during Respiratory Care Week. Today, RC Week and Lung Health
Day are delivering the message to medical professionals and consumers
around the world.
Lung
Health Day
Lung
Health Day is a major public awareness campaign sponsored by the American
Association for Respiratory Care (AARC). Its purpose is to promote the
importance of lung health and build awareness about diseases and conditions
that adversely affect healthy lungs.
This major campaign was kicked
off to great success in 2003 and coincides with Respiratory Care Week.
When making plans for RC Week, mark your calendar for Wednesday of that
week to plan special events that reach out to neighbors, family, friends,
businesses and community leaders to teach them what it takes to maintain
strong lung health. More on Lung
Health Day...

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