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For the fifth
year, the Columbus affiliate of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer
Foundation has made a grant to the college’s Community Service
Programs (CSP). The grant, this year totaling more than $69,000,
helps to fund the Healthy Adult Project, which helps provide
free breast exams for uninsured or underinsured women older than
40. The grant’s outreach covers 10 counties in Southeastern
Ohio, largely through the use of CSP’s Mobile Health Unit. The
grant, which has increased each year, allows women to receive
medical screenings that would otherwise not be available.
According to
Janice Smith, Healthy Adult Project coordinator, the program
serves people with different needs and backgrounds.
“Some women do
not have access to health care, and some just can’t afford it,
so we bring the care to them. Some of these people have not been
to a doctor in 10 to 15 years, and it is a tremendous service to
be able to provide,” Smith says.
Melanie
Moynan-Smith, CSP nurse practitioner, says that women that
benefit from the program have appreciated the service it
provides them.
“As a nurse
practitioner provider on the mobile unit,” says Moynan-Smith, “I
teach women about breast self-examinations and perform clinical
exams. I encounter many women in Southeastern Ohio who are
uninsured. Frequently, when the door is closed and I’m reviewing
their histories, women thank us for the breast cancer screening
we provide.”
“Our program has
identified many women in need of health care, and their numbers
are growing.”
OU-COM began its
relationship with the Komen Foundation in 2000 because of the
efforts of Marty Bayha, an administrative assistant in OU-COM’s
Department of Family Medicine and a five-year breast cancer
survivor.
Kathy Trace,
director of CSP, says that the Komen Foundation has given CSP
the ability to grow and serve more people each year through
augmenting the efforts of CSP’s Breast and Cervical Cancer
Project.
“We love working
with this organization,” Trace says.
The grant allows
not only for more health screenings but also for the
implementation of educational programs in high schools, senior
centers and other public locales. CSP believes education is
crucial in establishing healthy lifestyles.
“High school
girls need to know about these things. Breast education
shouldn’t start at age 40,” says Anne Pearch, a CSP
community health nurse coordinator who has spent much of her
nursing career on women’s health issues.
In addition to
free screenings and education, the Healthy Adult Project refers
women for mammograms and further diagnostic testing or
treatment. In addition to grants to breast cancer outreach and
treatment programs, the Komen Foundation hosts the “Race for the
Cure” in municipalities across the country. The race is one of
the foundation’s annual fundraisers.
The foundation’s
Race for the Cure in Columbus will he held Saturday, May 14.
“The Columbus
Race for the Cure has raised more than $6 million
for breast cancer research, education, screening and treatment,”
says Bayha. “Much more is needed so that women can get the help
they need.”
OU-COM is putting
together a team to participate in the race. Trace is heading up
the team and says that people may donate to the team until May
13. Anyone interested in participating in the race should
contact Trace at (740) 593-9364.
“This is one way
we can show our support and appreciation for all that they do in
this area,” Trace says.
“The event is
amazing to see. Twenty-five thousand people are anticipated to
participate in the event, held this year in downtown Columbus.
It gives you an idea of how many people are affected by the
disease and the number of individuals supporting the Race for
the Cure.”
The Susan G.
Komen Breast Cancer Foundation was founded in Dallas, Texas, in
1982 by Nancy Goodman Brinker, whose sister, Susan Goodman
Komen, died of breast cancer at age 36. Since its inception, the
organization has grown to include tens of thousands of
volunteers at 117 national affiliates and three international
sites. The foundation has raised more than $740 million, which
has been used for innovative cancer research and community
outreach programs as well as diagnostic efforts. In 2001, Komen
was named one of the 100 best charities by Worth
magazine.
- 30 -
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