Alumna Alicia McAuliffe-Fogarty’s Camp for Children with Diabetes Raises Funds for Permanent Site

November 06, 2005

Ten years ago Alicia McAuliffe-Fogarty ’04MA, ’05Ph.D. founded Circle of Life, a camp for children with diabetes near Albany, NY. Now, armed with her doctorate in clinical psychology from St .John’s University, this alumna is relocating the camp to what will be its permanent site and adding a residential treatment center. Miraculously, she has turned her own struggle with diabetes-- and understanding of the psychological ramifications of the disease-- into a mission to help children with a condition that can be managed but not yet cured.

“I know what it was like to be a child with diabetes,” she says. Diagnosed with the disease at age 11, she says, “I was afraid to go to camp for fear of appearing different because I had to inject myself with insulin.” At the Circle of Life Camp, Inc., a not-for-profit residential camp, children ages 8-15 can experience several days of camp in the summer while learning to manage their diabetes in a supportive environment with other children who also have the same condition.

Now this tireless St. John’s alumna –who is currently doing a post-doctoral fellowship in pediatric psychology at Yale University – is raising funds to purchase a 372-acre fully running camp with grounds on which to build a residential treatment facility for children with diabetes. The new site will be located in between Albany and New York City. (Currently, the bulk of the campers come from New York State, although children from eight other states also attend.) McAuliffe-Fogarty believes the Circle of Life camp and year-round residential treatment facility will be the first complex of its type anywhere in the world. The treatment facility would offer children with diabetes the medical, psychological, and social support they need to manage and cope with this chronic disease as they mature into adolescents.

The camp, which has used the facilities of Camp Scully in North Greenbush, NY, for two long weekends after its season ends in late August, accommodated 85 campers last year, assisted by doctors, nurses and dieticians. Medical staff and counselors volunteer but would be paid if the camp obtains the funding it’s seeking. The camp relies on contributions from individuals, businesses and civic organizations to keep the cost for campers at an affordable price. Financial assistance is available for low-income campers. The camp experience would be expanded to a week-long session in the new location.

A Celebrity Cook-Off Fundraiser
As founder and executive director, McAuliffe-Fogarty is intensifying her efforts to raise money to purchase the permanent site selected.  A Celebrity Cook-Off Fundraiser with movie star Kristanna Loken and two Yankees team members will be held on Thursday, November 10 at Carmines Restaurant in Albany. The evening will feature a five-course gourmet dinner with wine. Limited seating is available through Danielle at 518-669-3116.

McAuliffe-Fogarty is familiar with working hard to achieve her goals. She’s earned both her Master’s and Ph.D. in clinical psychology from St. John’s Graduate School of Liberal Arts and Sciences and received a (2001) Routh Student Research Grant from the American Psychological Foundation and APA Division 54, Society of Pediatric Psychology. She’s also written a book about the psychological impact of having diabetes, entitled, Growing up with Diabetes: What Children Want Their Parents to Know, published by John Wiley and Sons.

“Alicia was a particularly self-motivated student,” says her mentor and dissertation advisor St. John’s Psychology Professor Alice Pope. “She received an award for her thesis project: ‘Psychosocial Functioning and Regimen Adherence for Children with Diabetes.’”

For more information about the camp, contact www.circleoflifecamp.org.