Skip to main content
Williams Syndrome Association logo.
Donate
  • Join
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Español
  • Forums
  • About Us
    • Overview
    • Structure & Administration
      • Board of Trustees
      • Medical Advisors
      • Executive Director & Team
      • Consultants & Partners
    • Position Statements
    • Programs
    • Newsletters
    • Media & Press Center
  • Education
    • Overview
    • Getting Started in School
    • Creating an IEP
    • Education Strategies
    • Testing & Evaluation Strategies
    • Therapeutic Strategies for Education
    • Transition Strategies - High School to Adult Life
    • Life Skills & Post Secondary Programs
    • Featured Education Resources
    • Virtual Education Resources
    • Convention
    • Resources
  • Medical
    • Overview
    • Diagnosing Williams Syndrome
    • Healthcare Guidelines
    • Anesthesia Concerns
    • Cardiovascular Concerns
      • Cardiac and Sudden Death information
    • Gastrointestinal Concerns
    • Neurodevelopment & Behavioral Health
      • WS and Sexuality
    • Williams Syndrome Clinics
    • Collaborative Registry for WS (CReWS)
    • renovascular hypertension collaborative
    • Resources
    • Research
      • Overview
      • Current Studies
      • Grant Opportunities
      • Renovascular Hypertension Collaborative
  • Life with WS
    • Overview
    • What is Williams syndrome?
      • Overview
      • General Information
      • Diagnosing WS
      • New Diagnosis: First Steps
      • Therapeutic Interventions
      • Talking to Children about WS
      • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Family Support
      • Overview
      • Family Support Network
      • Support Groups
      • Connect with Others
      • Available Aid and Assistance
      • Financial Planning
      • Internet Safety and Assistive Technology Resources
      • Grandparents
      • Siblings
      • Resource Organizations
      • International Organizations
    • WSA Media and Entertainment
      • The Starry-Eyed Podcast
      • WS Audio, Video, and Text
      • News Items
      • Blog
    • Adult Life
      • Overview
      • Transition Strategies - High School to Adult Life
      • Life Skills & Post Secondary Programs
      • Housing
      • Employment
      • Adventure Seekers
      • Voting Resources
      • Wellness Wednesdays and Mindfulness Mondays with Nick
    • Programs
      • Become a Member
      • Convention
      • Adventure Seekers
      • Camps
      • Financial Aid & Scholarships
      • Grant Opportunities
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Attend an Event
    • Convention
    • In Loving Memory
    • Resources
  • Get Involved
    • Overview
    • Walks for Williams
    • Awareness Month
      • Awareness Month Toolkit!
    • Become a Member
    • Donate
    • Fundraise
    • Volunteer
    • Event Calendar
    • Host a Social/Connection Event
    • Vendor Network
    • Share Your Story
    • Your Contributions at Work
    • Shop our Merch
    • Contact the WSA

You are here

Home » WSA Blog

July 2025 Message from the WSA Executive Director

07/25/2025 - 7:36 pm |

Sarah Schaefer

Hello everyone!

Hope you’re all enjoying a beautiful (though incredibly hot) summer! It’s hard to believe it’s almost back to school time here in Florida! Here at the WSA, we’ve been busy as usual. I wanted to share a few important highlights with you!

Earlier this month, we welcomed Karina Botello as our new Donor Services Coordinator. She has over ten years of experience in Advancement, specializing in donor prospecting, research, gift processing, event planning, reporting, and Salesforce management. Karina, who is fluent in Spanish, is passionate about supporting mission-driven work through thoughtful, detail-oriented fundraising operations. She lives with her family in Los Angeles, and we’re thrilled to have her on our team! If you happen to speak with Karina, please help us give her a warm WSA welcome!

Death, loss, and grief are never easy topics. This year, we’ve begun to focus on these tough topics - and to create support around them. We’ve witnessed the loss of quite a number of individuals with WS recently, many of them suddenly. Conversations began among the WSA, the WS clinical consortium (including The Armellino Center of Excellence for Williams Syndrome (ACE for WS) and the other clinics), CReWS (the WSA’s Collaborative Registry on Williams Syndrome) and the AGF Grant around how we could best support families who have lost loved ones with WS, and how to further study the causes. The WSA is formalizing a multi-step approach to this topic. Though some of these pieces are still in development, I wanted to share the progress that has been made.

  • Support when the unthinkable occurs: The WSA currently has some incredible parents who have lost loved ones with WS leading a support group for others who experience that same loss. They’ve shared that they want their loss to serve a purpose and that they will always be a part of the WS community - and we couldn’t agree more! We are also creating a Grief Outreach Team - a trained group of bereaved parents who will reach out to offer support when a family loses a loved one with WS. Training and support for that outreach team will be provided by grief support professionals.
  • Documenting data around death: Currently, our registry is focused only on gathering data related to the life of someone with Williams syndrome. The WS Clinical Consortium and CReWS are developing a “Legacy Survey," which will help gather data related to the death of someone with WS. Data is the most powerful tool we have in research. The more data we have, the deeper our knowledge becomes. A number of families who have lost loved ones with WS are currently helping us test this survey, before we launch it to a broader audience. We intend to capture data about any cause of death - not just sudden cardiac death. This will also provide more robust data around the lifespan of individuals with WS.
  • Supporting and funding research: The AGF Grant, through the WSA, is now funding Dr. Mark Levin’s research at ACE on sudden cardiac death. As part of the research conference ACE is hosting this fall (in partnership with the WSA), there will be discussions around some of these cases. The WSA has reached out to a number of families to participate and to request permission to contact the clinicians who were involved. The AGF Grant has also been reaching out to families. If you know a family who would want to be included in this discussion, please email me at sarah@williams-syndrome.org.
  • Advanced planning tools: No one expects to lose their loved one suddenly. The WSA is creating a process to support parents in planning for the future, when you’re not facing the unthinkable. We will provide tools to help you document: 1) thoughts and wishes for your child around medical treatment should an emergency arise, 2) indicating whether or not you would want our grief outreach team to reach out to you in the event that you lose your child/adult with WS, 3) giving us permission to send the WSA CReWS survey to collect information around the death of your loved one, and 4) choose whether or not to donate your loved one’s tissue/organs/heart for research. We’ll share more information about this tool in the future.
  • A way to pay tribute: Our community is one of big feelings - joy, grief, love, loss, and togetherness. When someone in our community experiences a loss, we all truly grieve with them. Many families ask us to pay tribute to their loved one, share an obituary, or create a way others can give to the WSA in memory of their loved one. We’re finalizing a Tribute section of the WSA website where everyone who has passed can have a page dedicated to their memory. Watch for the launch of this section in August. 

Losing a loved one with WS is truly unimaginable. Unfortunately, there are many families in our community who have experienced this heartbreaking loss. Our goal is to surround those families with support and love, offer guidance and planning for those of us with family members affected by WS, continue funding research on sudden cardiac death, and honor the memory of those we've lost. We are deeply grateful to our partners in the WS Clinical Consortium, the AGF Grant, and the incredible families who continue to support one another through their grief.

If you’re wondering how you can make an impact right now, or how you can contribute toward moving research on Williams syndrome forward, if you have a child with Williams syndrome, please take the time to join our registry. Data makes a HUGE difference. 

If you, or someone you know, would like to learn more about any of these initiatives, please reach out to me at sarah@williams-syndrome.org. 

Take care everyone,

Sarah

Message from the Executive Director

Featured posts

Reflections and Gratitude: A Note from our Executive Director
Convention Programming Updates
Camp Blue Skies offers recreation and fun for adults with Williams syndrome
No Better Way to Celebrate
In Memoriam: Dr. Ursula Bellugi
Our 40th Anniversary…A Year of Transition for the WSA
Finding Answers, Changing Futures…Our Community Makes All the Difference

Categories

  • Ask the Expert
  • Awareness
  • Education
  • Employment & Community Involvement
  • Housing
  • Medical
  • Member Spotlight
  • Message from the Executive Director
  • Miscellaneous
  • Parent Perspective
  • Programs
  • Regional News and Events
  • Research
  • Technology
  • Volunteer Spotlight
  • Year-end wrap-up

Monthly archive

  • November 2025 (2)
  • October 2025 (2)
  • July 2025 (1)
  • April 2025 (1)
  • February 2025 (1)
  • December 2024 (1)
  • November 2024 (2)
  • June 2024 (1)
  • May 2023 (1)
  • January 2023 (1)
  • June 2022 (1)
  • April 2022 (1)
  • 1 of 6
  • next ›

Contact us

243 Broadway Unit 9188
Newark, NJ 07104

info@williams-syndrome.org

248.244.2229
800.806.1871
248.244.2230 fax

Follow us

Position on Inclusion

The WSA upholds the following positions on inclusion. We believe that: 

  • everyone benefits when individuals with WS are meaningfully included in educational, work, and community settings 
  • individuals with WS should receive all necessary supports and services to fully participate in their family lives, communities, and society as a whole
  • high expectations should be the norm, and individuals with WS and their families should decide how they best learn, work, and enjoy social settings
  • “inclusion” is not one-size-fits-all, and will look different for each family based on each individual’s desires and needs
  • inclusion creates a sense of belonging in society, meaningful relationships, and opportunities to achieve dreams

Funding priorities

Funding priorities pie chart.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Non-discrimination statement
  • dei statement
  • media & press center
  • 501(c)(3) organization
Copyright © 2025 Williams Syndrome Association | Web design
Give to our 2025 Holiday Appeal!

Your Gift Brings Our Community Closer. Give to the WSA Holiday Appeal.

Donate today!