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Gabrielle Union

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Breast Cancer Awareness And Screening Saves Lives -- At All Ages

Posted: 08/21/2012 6:45 pm

"Fear can literally kill you. It killed me." These were the words my close friend Kristen Martinez said to me two years ago, just days before she died of cancer.

In 2005, she was diagnosed with stage 4 metastasized breast cancer at 32 years old. She was underinsured and, like millions of other women, struggled to get the care that she needed.

Kristen knew she couldn't beat her diagnosis, but she was determined to educate other women about breast cancer and the importance of early diagnosis. She became a breast cancer advocate, talking to women across the country, urging them to speak up, take action, and take control of their health. Kristen died 5 years after she was diagnosed.

Today, her memory is the driving force behind my commitment to increase awareness about breast cancer, especially among young women and women of color.

At the time Kristen was diagnosed, we were both young and felt invincible. Getting sick just wasn't in the plans. But the reality is this: young women do get breast cancer. About 250,000 women in the U.S. are diagnosed with breast cancer each year; more than 11,000 of them are under age 40. While breast cancer is far from common among women under 40, younger women are more likely to be diagnosed with a more aggressive form of breast cancer, making them more likely to be diagnosed at a later stage and less likely to survive the disease.

And women of color are disproportionately affected by breast cancer. Black women under age 40 have a higher incidence of breast cancer than any other racial group, and we have the lowest survival rate. And breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among Latinas, who are often diagnosed at a later stage, when the cancer is more advanced and harder to treat.

Too many women don't get breast exams or follow up on abnormalities, usually because they can't afford it or they are afraid of what they'll learn. We have to make it easier for women of all ages to get the breast care they need.

In Kristen's name, I stood with Planned Parenthood this week to announce that the organization is expanding the services that already provide nearly 750,000 breast exams a year. Planned Parenthood will provide education and outreach to help women overcome fears about where to go, what to do, and what abnormalities may mean. The program will also increase access to screenings and specialized follow-up services, like ultrasounds and biopsies, to help more women get access to the care they need without worrying about cost.

Planned Parenthood is uniquely suited to do both, as a trusted health care provider for women, especially young women and low-income women. Fully 94 percent of the organization's patients are under the age of 40, so their doctors and nurses are in a prime position to help young women become more aware of breast health issues. That's great news for millions of women who face the difficult choice that Kristen faced: how to get the quality care they need and pay their bills.

And thanks to the Affordable Care Act's women's preventive care benefit, which started taking effect on August 1, women with new private insurance plans can be assured that their preventive care, like breast exams and mammograms, will be covered without expensive co-pays or deductibles.

Before Kristen died, I promised her that I would continue to speak up and take action to educate young women about breast cancer and early diagnosis. Planned Parenthood is making it easier for me to keep that promise. And I'm thankful for that, because for all the other Kristens out there, that knowledge could be the difference between life and death.

To schedule an appointment today or learn more about Planned Parenthood's expanded breast health program, visit www.plannedparenthood.org/breast-health.

 

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"Fear can literally kill you. It killed me." These were the words my close friend Kristen Martinez said to me two years ago, just days before she died of cancer. In 2005, she was diagnosed with sta...
"Fear can literally kill you. It killed me." These were the words my close friend Kristen Martinez said to me two years ago, just days before she died of cancer. In 2005, she was diagnosed with sta...
 
 
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02:28 PM on 09/02/2012
Thanks to Gabrielle for her powerful message and good work. Always enjoy when a public figure I enjoy does something to help others. Thanks to you dear one for an excellent post.
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Lonetress
07:22 AM on 08/29/2012
People who get the opportunity to access these services early should take advantage of the opportunity. My friend had a swelling in her cheek that was diagonised as a swollen saliva gland for 20 years. But when she realised it was growing bigger, she went to another hospital where she was diagonised with a tumour that was steadily growing and moving towards her brain. When she was operated, the doctor failed to finish the operation as the tumour was entwined with the veins and had eaten away at one of her facial bones. I am from a country where tests have to be taken to another country to get a diagnosis which means even the early scans that were given had the wrong information. She obviously has to go back for another operation but an early accurate diagnosis would have saved her so much pain and regrets.
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KWiedemer
Denver Unemployment Examiner
11:08 AM on 08/28/2012
In Colorado, efforts are underway to establish a health care Co-op which would create a single risk pool where all residents of Colorado would be owner-members of the Co-op. We would ask for waivers and pool all Medicare, Medicaid, VA benefits and other state-funded programs, such as the Colorado Indigent Care Program (CICP)which gives many who aren't eligible for Medicaid or other government-funded assistance programs, access to low-cost clinics based on sliding scale income.

Instead of paying premiums to a health insurance company, individuals and business would pay smaller premiums based on payroll and income - it will bring down health care costs for everyone, including business owners who would no longer have to worry about the time and expense of administering health insurance plans for their employees - and their health care costs would be predictable.

Of course, if individuals still want to purchase additional 'cadillac' plans from the insurance companies for benefits not covered by the Cooperative, they are free to do so.

Conservatives want to contain costs and have freedom of choice, while liberals want to cover everyone. The Cooperative would do both.

email: info@healthcareforallforless.org
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KWiedemer
Denver Unemployment Examiner
11:08 AM on 08/28/2012
Thanks so much for writing about this. I have been among the long term unemployed (& periodically, the under-employed) since I was laid off from my job as an operations analyst in July, 2008. I have also, obviously, joined the growing ranks of the uninsured. I too have breast lumps and have, in the past, put off seeing a doctor and diagnoses - all because I kept thinking I'd find a job that offers the health insurance coverage I always took for granted - but which still hasn't happened. The lumps are back and through grants and low income clinics am (slowly) getting some of the care that I need.

I'm tired of the political divide - on the issues of unemployment (we are NOT lazy) and especially on the issue of affordable health care, and the access to health care. We are people - not data points or 'cost centers'.
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prfktstrngr527
Eternal vigilance is the price of li berty. Ida B.
07:21 PM on 08/26/2012
Thanks for the article Gabrielle! Always liked you. Like you even more now. Keep up the good work. As an AA woman who is about to go for a diagnostic mammogram, next month, for a lump found, it is scary to think about. But, I am going face it as logically sound as I can muster.
09:33 AM on 08/26/2012
Great posts to this article. Also need to put more emphasis on prevention. So many ways to cut risk, but the information is all over the place and can be really confusing. There is an article here on HuffP by Harriet Sugar-Miller about Flax seed that is great. Estrogen in a female body is very complicated there are many kinds. The human body is very complicated but we are really gathering so much wonderful information on how disease is unique to the individual, but commonalities exist among gene pools. I've also heard of a study on curcumin and breast cancer survival. Health care needs reform from so many angles, unfortunately I agree w/ posts here - the greedy don't care about other's survival, only their own.
01:59 AM on 08/26/2012
This article started with a powerful quote about how FEAR kills.
The rest of the article is about accessing care and treatment for breast cancer.
Does any of this care or treatment help kill the FEAR? I don't think so.

We need more REAL awareness, to help women know that we CAN both prevent breast cancer with healthy living, heal from it and recover.
Instead what we get is more and more fear mongering from doctors and the media. If we women don't stop the fear consciousness who will?
12:26 AM on 08/26/2012
I refuse to get a mammogram. Because my mother died of breast cancer, the women's health center at a MAJOR hospital in Boston insisted that I get a "baseline" mammogram at the age of 30. This was nearly 30 years ago. I didn't want to, but they scared me into it, and told me that great strides had been made in radiation and it was perfectly safe. Of course, it was a waste of time, since the tissue was too dense to see anything. Five years later, another one. Then they said I should have one every year after the age of 40. I never went back when I learned that you can get cancer from repeated radiation treatments. My mother-in-law had a mammogram every year past the age of 50--for 25 years. When she was 75--surprise!--she got breast cancer. Gee, you think 25 years of having her breasts bombarded with radiation every year might have something to do with it? My doctor keeps after me to get one, telling me that they the radiation is "much safer" now. I'm not buying it. Especially since they've been singing that tune for decades now. No way. Self-checks, a clean diet (mostly organic, no meat), plenty of water, exercise. I'm not going to be terrorized into overloading my body with radiation--because fear should can k ill you.
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veggieone
The truth is out there.... I hope.
09:10 PM on 08/26/2012
You are so right!
My husband and I don't even get x-rays at the dentist, as long as our teeth have no obvious problems. You can not believe the 'it's safe' line!
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veggieone
The truth is out there.... I hope.
11:29 AM on 08/27/2012
medicalconsumers.org/2012/03/31/book-review-mammography-screening-truth-lies-and-controversy-2/

Important news about mammograms.
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GrumpyOldGeek
My micro-bio is empty
04:34 AM on 08/27/2012
My Aunt refused to get mammograms.

She's dead.

Breast cancer.
01:41 PM on 08/27/2012
I'm sorry about your aunt. But I've refused to get mammograms and I'm alive. No breast cancer.
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Richard Wilcox
A Fluff Piece? I Call This A Huff Piece.
02:44 PM on 08/25/2012
Ladies, here is something I learned in the late 1970's. Have your partner go with you the next time you go to the doctor for a check up. While there, ask your Doctor to teach your partner how to give you a breast exam and what to feel for. I know this sounds odd, but once taught, your partner's examination of your breasts, while beneficial, can turn into some hot foreplay. Think about it.
02:38 PM on 08/24/2012
i am a breast cancer survivor... i just want to let everyone know if theyhave no insurance to call the AVON organization....I do the Avon walk for five years now... i walk or try to walk the 39 miles to help people in these situations... also, i had cousin who had a lump but she ignored it and passed away... PLEASE DON'T BE AFRAID TO GO TO THE DOCTOR... so many women i know still don't go even after my story.....i felt a lump but was going to wait two months for my mammogram..... i mentioned it to a women at work who had breast cancer...she implored me not to wait... so i went.... 10 days later in the hospital for surgery... stage 2, surgery, four fun-filled months of chemo and 37 exhausting rounds of radiation... still here to day to talk about it... but if waited,..... things would be much different... by the way...found the hardness that was cancer right on the surface two months after gyno appointment... it just exploded in two short months... so please, go get checked. god bless my sisters (as well as men) who have , are or will go thru this....keep up the fight, and like i said, no insurance go to avon.org....... f cancer
08:58 PM on 08/23/2012
This is why afforabke health care is important while Paul Ryan wants to turn the medicare program into a voucher program by then more and more women and seniors will die due to Ryan's plan that wouldn't even affect his own mother. I'm quite sure Ryan's mother dose not have an HMO.
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f0rTyLeGz
Everything is falling.
12:50 AM on 08/23/2012
Breast exams and care for all cancer patients should be free.
09:01 PM on 08/23/2012
f0rTyLeGz Mitt and Romney dose not care. It's just that plain and simple especially when they have asked the news media not to ask them questions that pertain to medicare, womens health issues such as birth control and aboration. Dosen't sound to presidential.
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OCCUPYCONGRESS
01:26 PM on 08/26/2012
They don't want to explain how their polcies hurt the middleclass and the pooor. They want to cut all social programs to give more money to the rich and recently Republicans cut billions of dollars from Food Stamps to give the Big Agriculture (think Monsanto). Monsanto produces Genetically Modified produce that according to naturopaths will be harmful to the hiuman body and does not contain the nutrients that regular produce contains and they are fighting like mad to not be required to label their GMO'S because they know people would not buy it if they knew. We have a right to know what we put in our families bodies but Big Agriculture could care less as long as their produce gets bigger and they make higher profits and use those profits to intimidate and destroy small farmers that refuse to use Monsanto seeds. Corruption at its finest in Washington DC. Politiicians allow it because they get paid to alllow it and could care less what it does to our country and its population. Many studies have proven that their FrankenFood is harmful to human bodies. They pay organizations to present incorrect data and present it to congress to get approval. The American people have no support system. The FDA and USDA have been bought off by Big Agriculture.
09:02 PM on 08/23/2012
f0rTyLeGz my comment was Mitt and Ryan, not Mitt and Romney. I need some sleep...lol.
10:52 PM on 08/22/2012
Great job Gabrielle
08:24 PM on 08/22/2012
Susan Komen foundation funded my mamms found cancer and has helped me 2 get tx free of charge.I cant thank them enough.If u can donate 2 them please do.
09:03 PM on 08/23/2012
northhouse1121 glad to hear about your mom's cancer. All I can say Obama 2012.
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onemadashell
07:48 PM on 08/22/2012
maybe if the test were not painful then more women would get them. of course the insurance company wouldnt pay for the exams. insurance is such a scam any more. you pay for them to be there when you need them but when you do they say they dont cover that. if thats the case then give me all the money i have been paying you back to me and i will find an insurance company that will pay.
03:03 PM on 08/26/2012
I did not find my mammogram painful at all.