Another Side to the Story - African American and Latina Women Reach Out To Increase Cancer Survival

CHA Participants [http://faithinthebay.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/img_1536.jpg]African Americans and Latinas are less likely than other women to develop certain cancers, but they’re also less likely to survive them. At WCRC, two new programs are training survivors to go into their own communitie

CHA Participants
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“There’s a reluctance on the part  of African American women to get screened and to openly discuss the  information,” says Dolores Moorehead, who leads the Community Health  Advocates  (CHA) program. Moorehead sees a need for education and  support, particularly around breast and cervical cancers. “Many women  are fearful,” she says. “They’ve heard stories from a grandmother  or a friend, so they choose not to get screened. Their approach is ‘if  it’s not broken, don’t fix it.’”

Moorehead trains and supervises advocates  who speak at health fairs, churches, and workplaces; provide telephone  support; and even go along on medical visits. CHAs have reached more  than 400 African American women in Alameda County.  

As an example of the program in action,  advocate  and cancer survivor Merry Montgomery accompanied client  Christy Crowder to the UCSF medical center, helping her to negotiate  the city’s transportation system and to fill out hospital forms. Crowder,  new to the Bay Area and here without family, was deeply grateful. “It  was extremely helpful to have emotional support from someone who had  the personal knowledge of how I felt and could share some of that burden  with me,” she says.

“They can show that there’s another  side to the story,” says Moorehead, describing the importance of the  advocates.  Joanna Cuevas-Ingram, who formerly led Las Comadres,  a program modeled on the CHAs, also sees the need for positive role  models. “Las Comadres, especially as fellow survivors, inspire newly  diagnosed women, providing much needed support and living proof that  not every diagnosis has to be a death sentence; current research proves  that women often survive if they are diagnosed early.”  

Cancer survivor, patient, and comadre  Yolanda Mendoza is a reporter for the Spanish-language radio station  KIQI. Her message to listeners: “Please be on the safe side and have  your doctor check you. Silence is what kills.”

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Womens Cancer Resource Center (WCRC)  |  http://www.wcrc.org
MISSION:  To empower women with cancer to be active and informed consumers                      and survivors; to provide community for women with cancer                      and their supporters; to educate the general community about                      cancer; and to be actively involved in the struggle for a                      life-affirming, cancer-free society.

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