Noah @ nih scaled

Noah Victoria: 2016 Rare Impact Award Honoree

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Noah Maria Victoria wrote her first poem at the age of 13 or 14 as a homework assignment.  She composed “The Window,” a metaphor for her journey and countless trips to Children’s Hospital and the National Institutes of Health clinical centers.  “My car window has been my companion the entire time,” she says. Nih # 3  

Today, Noah is an 18-year-old Positive Exposure Ambassador who blogs and contributes poetry to the PEARLS Project ,a groundbreaking educational program for students, teachers, and healthcare providers to learn about the real life experiences of individuals and their families living with genetic, physical, cognitive and behavioral differences.  

She has taught nearly a generation of medical student and residents not only about her disease but about what it means to live with a rare disease, and to approach life with humor and a positive attitude.

As an advocate, she is a member of the Running for Rare charity marathon team and hosts a booth at the NIH for Rare Disease Day, representing the team and its effort to support NORD’s Undiagnosed Program and pay for out of pocket expenses for patients and families enrolled in the NIH Undiagnosed Diseases Program. Recently, she rallied adults in her church community to call their congresspersons and urge them to vote “yes” for the 21st Century Cures Act.Rare disease day 2016

Noah is a very tall 4’8” in every sense of the world.  Born premature, she was diagnosed at 6 months of age with Abetalipoproteinemia (Abeta), a rare genetic condition that results in a malabsorbtion of fat which leads to a number of complications. She stopped growing at the age of 13.  As her mother says, “She is missing this tiny little protein, and the importance is so massive.” Noah also has unexplained symptoms of debilitating dysautonomia, and cystic changes to her bones that facilitated her enrollment in the Undiagnosed Diseases Program. Frequently in pain, she fights to make an impact for everyone fighting a rare disease.Rdd #4

“I want people to know about rare diseases,” she says. “They are just as hard as common diseases.  There is no cure for it, and no real ending to having a chronic illness.  You fight it every day.  I want people to know because they should try to help.”

She continues, “I use my work to show that we’re just like everyone else. My goal is I want to improve education around rare diseases.”

Noah’s poem “The Tree” will be featured this year in the Children’s Inn “Book of Hope” provided to donors to this home-away-from-home for pediatric patients and their families being treated at the NIH Clinical Center.

“What I want people to know is I’m not giving up.  It is not an option for me and I believe it holds true for all of us with a rare disease.”

Noah went on to say that, “We must stick together so rare diseases can be known all over the world.”


“The Window” 

by Noah Maria Victoria

The window well traveled always by my side,
my companion through the darkest of times.

The fog that lifted in the air
ran away once the eyes caught glimpse of light.

Hope and Courage crossed the street,
I knew then that I was not alone.

NORD is honored to tell Noah’s story as part of its 2016 Rare Impact Awards.
Read the stories of all of our 2016 Rare Impact Award Honorees here.