Black Health

Sickle Cell · Delaware

Sickle cell disease resources in Delaware

SCDAA chapter Medicaid: case-by-case ~650 SCD patients

SCDAA chapter

SCDAA of Delaware Valley

Nemours / Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children in Wilmington runs Delaware's only pediatric SCD comprehensive clinic; adults are usually referred to Christiana Care or across the state line to Thomas Jefferson in Philadelphia.

Roughly 650 people in Delaware are estimated to live with sickle cell disease; the figure comes from the CDC's Sickle Cell Data Collection program in participating states and from NHLBI modeling elsewhere. Delaware began universal newborn screening for sickle cell disease in 1993 — every baby born in the state is now screened at birth, which lets families start twice-daily penicillin prophylaxis by two months old and dramatically reduces childhood SCD mortality. For confirmatory testing and hematology follow-up after a positive screen, ask your pediatrician for a referral to the closest comprehensive sickle cell center listed on this page.

Delaware Medicaid covers hydroxyurea — the cornerstone disease-modifying therapy for SCD. Delaware Medicaid covers Casgevy and Lyfgenia on a case-by-case prior-authorization basis. As of 2026, only roughly 45 comprehensive centers nationally are authorized to administer Casgevy (exa-cel), and fewer still are authorized for Lyfgenia (lovo-cel). Coverage status alone doesn't guarantee access — patients must be at least 12 years old with recurrent vaso-occlusive crises, enrolled at an authorized center, and cleared through the center's multi-step stem-cell-collection and conditioning protocol.

Community support in Delaware runs through SCDAA of Delaware Valley. SCDAA chapters coordinate annual Sickle Cell Awareness events, patient education, and advocacy — most keep a current list of pediatric and adult comprehensive clinics in the state and can help patients navigate insurance pre-authorization for disease-modifying therapies.

Delaware at a glance

Newborn screening start
1993
Estimated SCD patients in state
~650
Medicaid: hydroxyurea
Covered
Medicaid: CRISPR gene therapy
Case-by-case prior authorization

For Black families

Roughly 1 in every 365 Black infants born in the United States inherits sickle cell disease, and roughly 1 in 13 carries the sickle cell trait — the highest carrier frequency of any population group in the country. Because newborn screening is universal, nearly every Black family in Delaware whose baby has SCD receives the diagnosis before they leave the hospital — which is exactly why timely follow-up with a comprehensive center matters more than the diagnosis itself.

The hardest periods in the SCD lifespan are the transition from pediatric to adult care (roughly ages 18-25, when preventable mortality peaks) and emergency-department visits for vaso-occlusive crises, where published research has consistently documented longer time-to-analgesia and higher suspicion of drug-seeking behavior for Black SCD patients than for white patients with comparable pain. Transition programs, pain plans, and hematologist letters addressed to ED staff reduce both. Every comprehensive center listed on this page supplies those materials on request.

Where to get help in Delaware

  • SCDAA of Delaware Valley: https://sicklecelldelawarevalley.org/ · 1-215-427-0848. The state's primary community organization for SCD advocacy, peer support, and family education.
  • Hematology-oncology providers in Delaware: /providers/?state=DE&specialty=hematology-oncology. Filter our directory to hematology-oncology specialists.
  • Federally Qualified Health Centers in Delaware: /clinics/de/. FQHCs accept Medicaid, charge on a sliding scale, and are the practical first stop when you need a primary-care home that will coordinate SCD specialty referrals.
  • Delaware Medicaid: /medicaid/delaware/ covers eligibility, how to apply, and our delaware tracker for 12-month postpartum extension + doula coverage — relevant to pregnant people carrying sickle cell trait or SCD.
  • CDC Sickle Cell Data Collection program: cdc.gov/ncbddd/hemoglobinopathies/scdc publishes claims-based SCD prevalence for participating states.
  • National SCDAA Connect line: 1-800-421-8453. Routes callers to local chapter resources and hospital social-work teams experienced with SCD.

References

Data refreshed: