As mothers and families, we refuse to let politics or foreign dependencies jeopardize our children’s health.
At The Cure Coalition, we are bound by a simple, urgent truth: every child and family deserves medicines developed under the highest safety standards, free from foreign dependence and compromise.
As mothers, healthcare professionals, and concerned citizens, we understand that medical breakthroughs don’t happen by accident—they are the result of rigorous, ethical scientific research conducted with unwavering commitment to patient safety. We believe American families should never have to choose between innovation and safety, or between medical progress and ethical standards.
Our coalition advocates for responsible medical research that protects patients while advancing cures. We support the strategic integration of promising new technologies when they are properly validated and ready for implementation. At the same time, we recognize that certain complex medical research, particularly for life-saving treatments, still requires comprehensive testing approaches that have proven essential for protecting human health.
News
National Public Health Week: The Rising Risk We Don’t See
National Public Health Week is a chance to celebrate how far American public health has come — and to address the ongoing and emerging risks we face. As the nation focuses on this year’s theme, “Ready. Set. Action!”, The Cure Coalition is sounding the alarm on a...
Statement from The Cure Coalition on NIH’s $150 Million Investment in Human-Based Research to Reduce Use of Animal Models
Washington, DC - The Cure Coalition applauds the NIH’s commitment to innovation and the development of more sophisticated research tools. However, while reducing the use of animals in biomedical research is a worthy goal, rushing to eliminate proven methods before...
Rare Disease Day: Putting Patients First, Every Day
February 28 is Rare Disease Day, dedicated to the millions of individuals and families navigating conditions that are often misunderstood, underfunded, and overlooked. While each rare disease affects a small population on its own, collectively rare diseases impact...
