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Honoring CJ on World Sickle Cell Day: What Every Parent of an Athlete Needs to Know

Today, on World Sickle Cell Day, we pause to raise awareness—highlighting not only sickle cell disease, but also the often-overlooked risk of sickle cell trait (SCT).


SCT is commonly misunderstood. Many carry it without symptoms. But under certain extreme conditions—particularly intense physical exertion—it can pose serious health threats.


We know this because it affected our son.

Calvin “CJ” Dickey Jr. — Strong, Healthy, Full of Promise


A dedicated athlete, CJ earned a place on the Bucknell University football team. He was prepared for his first day of conditioning in July 2024—eager to grow, learn, and lead.


During that session, he collapsed. Two days later, he died.


CJ carried SCT is a trait, not a disease. While many athletes carry SCT without issue, in certain situations of extreme physical stress, proper hydration, rest, and medical oversight are key.


Risks like rhabdomyolysis, pain crisis, cardiac arrest, and sudden collapse have been well documented in SCT-positive athletes under extreme conditions.


Still, far too many athletic programs lack awareness—or adequate policies—to handle this medical emergency.


What Every Parent, Athlete, and Athletic Program Should Know


🏈 Parents — It’s vital to know your child’s status and ask your child’s coaches or medical staff:

“Is my child’s SCT status known? Are protocols in place for SCT-related emergencies?”


💉 Athletes — Know your body’s signals.

Comfortably say “something isn’t right” if you feel it. Request breaks, hydration, or medical evaluation as needed. Your well-being is not optional—it is essential.


🏫 Athletic Programs — Follow evidence-based guidelines.


The NCAA and sports medicine experts provide comprehensive protocols for managing SCT-positive athletes. These are not suggestions—they are essential safety standards. Every program should enforce them.


Why we Continue to Speak Out

Medical professionals acknowledge that, in most cases, SCT-related exertional deaths are preventable when proper precautions are in place. That recognition is the foundation of our message.


We believe CJ’s death may have been preventable—and we are determined to ensure other families don’t have to endure the same loss.


This message is born of heartbreak—and driven by purpose.


We will continue advocating—for education, for safety, and for accountability. Every athlete deserves to pursue their aspirations safely. Every parent deserves to see their child return home.


The Power of Sharing


We’re sharing CJ’s story to protect current and future athletes.


If this post promotes awareness, encourages dialogue, or prevents even a single tragedy, telling CJ’s story matters.


In his honor, we commit to awareness, prevention, and collective action.


🔒 Legal Disclaimer:

This post shares the author’s personal experiences and is intended for educational and advocacy purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice or commentary on ongoing legal proceedings.


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