Richard E. Poulin III, Columnist —

an American currently working as Head of Middle School for an international school in Bangkok, Thailand. He is also the president of the nonprofit organization Teach RARE. In 2018 his newborn daughter, Rylae-Ann, was diagnosed with the ultra-rare disease, aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency. Richard shares his journey and aims to provide caregivers with strategies and tips to improve their family's journey.

Articles by Richard Poulin III

When patient care coordination falls to the caregivers

Our daughter, Rylae-Ann, went through a diagnostic journey for eight months until we finally discovered, by chance, what she had. Even after learning she had the rare disease known as aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency, very little support was available to us. And yet our…

How we meet the challenges of routine parenting tasks

During a workshop for rare disease caregivers, a fellow parent reminded me that while therapy and activities are great topics for discussion, we can’t forget the struggle of simply coping with life and completing routine tasks. Her comment caused me to pause and reflect. It was so true. When I…

Our Family Returns to Taiwan to Join a 2nd AADC Deficiency Study

Last October, news began to circulate that Taiwan was reopening for tourism after lifting pandemic restrictions. Usually my family would celebrate an opportunity to travel; instead, this news meant continuing our obligation to contribute data to medical research. On Nov. 13, 2019, our daughter, Rylae-Ann, underwent experimental gene therapy…