My name is Jill Dehlin, and I have been a patient advocate for as long as I have been a nurse, which is a long time! In fact, throughout my careers as a nurse, teacher and health educator, my overarching goals have been to advocate for and empower people to take charge of their health. This was crucial when I became disabled by chronic migraine in 2006. Even though I am a nurse, there was much for me to learn about migraine. I felt overwhelmed by my disease. So, I set out to educate myself, find out what I could do to feel better and to empower myself. This led me to the National Headache Foundation website.
National Headache Foundation has always been a great source of information for people with headache disorders. For example, I found a diary I could use to track my headache days and the meds I was using to avoid overuse. I found out about triggers and set out to find my own.
To learn even more information about migraine and headache, I started attending conferences, which were designed to educate healthcare providers caring for people with headache. This is where I met other advocates, including Mary Franklin, a nurse and executive director of the National Headache Foundation. We hit it off right away.
In February of 2018, I was looking for a meaningful way to apply my skills as a patient advocate, and Mary asked me to become the chair of the newly created Patient Leadership Council. I said yes without hesitation. It was then that I came to realize just how devoted the National Headache Foundation is to patients. Everyone I have worked with there has been tremendously supportive and encouraging. Their patient-centered approach is one that really appeals to me.
As chair of the Patient Leadership Council, I was asked to find a diverse and committed group of people who would be willing to help the National Headache Foundation in their mission to “cure headache and end its pain and suffering.” I found 14 men and women from across the country with a range of headache disorders. Some are new to advocacy and some are seasoned veterans. We held our first formal meeting in San Francisco in June 2018. We learned about the history and mission of the National Headache Foundation as well as the role of the Patient Leadership Council, which is to advise the National Headache Foundation on ways to improve patient resources and acting as an in-house focus group. Some of the ideas generated at that meeting are already coming to fruition just one month later, like support for college students struggling with headache disorders. It is exciting to be part of such a dynamic organization. As far as I am concerned, the National Headache Foundation was the perfect place for me to utilize my past experience and skills.
Over the past several decades, I have held many positions that have gotten me to this place. I worked with my husband, a physician, as we started his internal medicine practice in Lansing, MI. Unsurprisingly, patient education and advocacy were my favorite jobs. After earning bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education and public health, I became a Certified Health Education Specialist (CHES). I worked as an adjunct college professor in health sciences. I was advised to get my PhD, which I nearly did until chronic migraine disease got in my way. This is when I really became a patient advocate: for myself and for others.
My headache advocacy began in 2011 as a board member, then chair of the now-disbanded American Headache and Migraine Association (AHMA). I have been to Washington, D.C. to advocate and lobby my legislators for the past three years with Headache on the Hill. I am currently on the boards of the Coalition for Headache and Migraine Patients (CHAMP) and the Alliance for Headache Disorders Advocacy (AHDA).
I find it immensely rewarding to be able to put my past experiences into practice and continue to advocate for and educate people. I extend my thanks to the staff and board members of the National Headache Foundation who have welcomed me with open arms and made me feel like part of their family.
Jill Dehlin, RN, MA, MPH, CHES