Monday, November 30, 2015

Celebrate Giving Tuesday with The Rose

Giving Tuesday is a global day of giving that everyone is invited to participate in. Today, we're asking our community to support The Rose in any way you can. Here are a few ways you can join in on #GivingTuesday:


Every donation to The Rose helps provide women with access to quality breast health care. A donation of $150 helps to sponsor a mammogram for one woman in need. Donate here.



Have you heard George’s story of how a $1 donation traveled 800 miles to The Rose? Read it here.


Every 3 insured women who have a mammogram at The Rose help provide 1 uninsured woman with a mammogram. We encourage you to schedule your annual appointment with us and invite two of your friends to do the same. Request an appointment.

3. Spread the Word

We ask that you spread the word about The Rose to your friends and family. You can ask your friends to donate or schedule their mammogram with us, or you can share information about the importance of annual screenings and early detection.

Studies show women often put personal needs on hold while tending to the needs of others. Many women cite cost and lack of access as reasons they delay preventive services. Yet, early detection mammography screenings are the most powerful weapons in the fight against breast cancer - which is 98% curable when detected early.



The Power Of A Dollar

George was delivering a new replacement mammography van for our Mobile Unit 1, driving from Phoenix, Arizona to Houston. Our logo and the van’s bright pink color sparkled in the sunshine and could be seen for miles. About 20 miles outside of El Paso, he stopped at a service station. While waiting for the tank to fill, a very beat-up pick-up truck pulled up beside him. The driver reached out of his window and pushed a waded, partly torn dollar bill into George’s hand. In broken English he said, “For The Rose!” George, stunned, tried to explain that he was just a driver and that he didn’t actually work for The Rose. The man continued to talk and finally George understood: The Rose had cared for his mother. At the man’s insistence that The Rose needed this $1 bill, George accepted the crumpled bill and sat it on the dashboard. After an 800 mile trip, he arrived safely at The Rose with the dollar bill and a touching story to share.


The Infinity of Giving

At The Rose, we reduce deaths from breast cancer by providing access to screening, diagnostics, and treatment services to any woman regardless of her ability to pay. Women often find The Rose during a time of need in their life and because of the treatment they receive through us, are able to go on to make a better life for themselves, cancer-free.  Family members and friends of these women and others, also feel the care The Rose provides to their loved one.

Many times, the same men and women who are touched by The Rose during their time of need make a special effort to give back to The Rose. Some events from friends and family that have become special contributors to The Rose include 30 for Ana and Jump for The Rose.

Other times, friends and family remember the warmth that The Rose gave to their family and give what they can, even if it’s $1. Each contribution, no matter the size, is valued by The Rose. With each dollar, we can provide more women with access to quality breast health care.



Tuesday, November 24, 2015

The Rose Pink Friday Gift Guide

When we hear a loved one has been diagnosed with breast cancer, our first reaction is to ask how we can help. This Thanksgiving season, we’ve put together a gift guide just in time for Black Friday that will make your loved one’s treatment just a little easier to bear. Make this Black Friday a Pink Friday and shop for good.


          1. Kindle complete with The Women of The Rose

The Women of The Rose, written by Dorothy Gibbons, shares the stories of tenacity, strength, and how The Rose began with a mission to serve all women, including the uninsured.

A Kindle makes a great gift for your loved one during treatment as the E-reader is lightweight and can hold thousands of books. Find out more about The Women of The Rose and Amazon Kindles.

           2. A New Journal

Going through breast cancer treatment is like nothing else. Gift your loved one with a journal in which she can write her thoughts, memories, prayers, and stories. To get her started, have members of your family begin her journal by writing encouraging messages.

           3. A Warm Blanket
Staying warm during chemotherapy and radiation treatment can be tricky. Find a warm, soft, lightweight blanket that can be wrapped around your loved one during treatment. A larger blanket is better so that nurses can tuck and wrap the blanket around treatment areas.

           4. A Hat
Heat can easily escape the body through the scalp. Look for a soft knit hat to keep your loved one comfortable during treatment.
  
          5. Lip balm, hand cream, and sanitizer



During treatment, skin becomes drier and more fragile than your loved one has likely ever experienced. Keeping skin healthy during treatment becomes important for the immune system. Dry, sensitive skin is prone to eczema, itching, and sores that can easily become infected. We suggest a hydrating skin care routine that includes gentle cleansers, moisturizers, and sanitizers. Giving a hydrating skin routine gift basket will make your loved one more comfortable and help prevent infection during treatment. 

On behalf of our team at The Rose, we wish you and your loved ones a very warm, happy Thanksgiving. 


Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Celebrating Veterans Day at The Rose

As some of our patients know, The Rose is the exclusive provider of breast health services to the VA for our area in Southeast Texas. We are proud to have served our veterans exclusively since 1999 and our mobile fleet visits VA locations in Katy, Tomball, Houston, Lufkin, Beaumont and Texas City.

Today, as we honor our veterans, we'd like to celebrate the brave men and women who have gone on to become our patients after their return home. In the last two years, we have cared for 3,252 veteran patients and of those:

  • 2,986 are female
  • 266 are male
  • 28 have been diagnosed with breast cancer
  • 1 male veteran was diagnosed
  • The youngest veteran diagnosed was 40 years old

We would also like to say a special thank you to our two veterans on staff at The Rose, Cathie Sublett and Tisha Diaz, as well as one of our radiologists, Dr. Parsons. Thank you for your service to our country and to our community at The Rose.



What our veterans said about The Rose: 
  • "This was an unexpected delight to find The Rose in partnership with the VA."
  • "Great girls doing this. Thanks for coming to the Texas City VA."
  • "Thank you, VA, for looking out for women veterans. This was very convenient."
  • "The customer service was excellent on both sides – the VA as well as The Rose. One of the best techs ever. She is a star to The Rose."


Wednesday, October 28, 2015

New Recommendations Lead to More Confusion


What Matters Most? 
Last week, another ‘new’ recommendation about screening mammograms was announced.  
Another story hits the headlines telling women that they don’t need to have a mammogram, at least not until they are 45 years old and then at 54 only have their screenings every other year if “they expect to live till 65 years old.”  (If expected to live??)
The announcement was another reason for women to be confused about what they should and shouldn’t do.  
One more time when the headlines about screening raise questions about the value of mammography – confusion that could mean another woman’s life is lost.
Am I being too dramatic? Too alarmist?  
No.  I’m serious when I make that statement.  Delaying annual screenings can result in the loss of life.  It can also mean losing years of life that a woman could spend with her family and friends. It can also mean a totally different regimen of treatment—the difference between surgery alone and surgery with months of chemotherapy and radiation.
I read the entire announcement from the American Cancer Society with a heavy heart.  At least they did their ‘research’ right, and didn’t use the flawed studies that led to the United States Preventative Services Task Force’s proposed recommendations that tell women to postpone screening until age 50. (Recommendations that have not yet been accepted.)
The articles that supported the ACS recommendations talked about how they follow those currently used in other  developed countries, such as England, Canada, and Australia, which state that ‘screening women in their forties isn’t cost effective or a good use of healthcare dollars.’
No one has ever argued that screening younger women is ‘cost effective.’  At least not anyone in the breast cancer world I’ve worked in.  We’ve always known that fewer breast cancers per 1000 are found in women under age 50.  But what does ‘cost effective’ really mean?  And who defines ‘good use’ of healthcare dollars?  Especially if that forty year old is you or someone you love.
Another issue they discuss is the problem of false positives-those results that require women to have more testing after a screening mammogram. The idea that women are overwhelmed with anxiety due to false positives just doesn’t ring true.
In my book, The Women of The Rose, I talk about how the women I know aren’t unduly traumatized by having a follow-up test.  They want to know what’s going on with their breast and relieved when the area in question proves to be a benign finding. 
Of course, when mammograms are read by folks who know their stuff, the rate of recalls is low---and of those about half will have something that needs to be biopsied.  That’s when a follow-up test counts the most. I don’t know many women who would want to bank the rest of their lives on a 50/50 chance.  No, they’ll have the additional test and willingly.
Haven’t most of us had a lab test that didn’t come back in the normal ranges?  Either we had to have it repeated in a couple of months or they ran additional tests.  Even a simple urinalysis is accompanied by a ‘culture’ order if something shows up out of normal range.  At least if the doctor ordering the urinalysis in the first place is smart enough to add that note. 
I sure hope the national organizations with a lot more clout than The Rose continue to challenge that idea. Someone needs to. 
Thank goodness the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American College of Radiology and the Society of Breast Imaging continue to support the recommendation of starting mammograms at age 40 and having one every year after that.
There is no doubt in my mind that women need to start screening at age forty—in fact at The Rose we will continue to recommend a baseline at age 35.  
Our experience and our statistics are absolutely clear:  one half of all of our women who are diagnosed each year are diagnosed under the age of 50.  Of the 325 we diagnosed last year, 157 fell in that range.  We know screening younger women works.   Thirty years of doing mammograms adds up to a lot of women and finding a lot of cancer.  We’ve seen the number of 40 year-olds being diagnosed rise with each passing year.  We know these women by name, met their families, comforted their children.  
Thirty years of watching too many women die because their cancers were found too late makes me livid when I hear of ‘new’ recommendations or ‘new’ studies advising women to postpone it.
We’ve also seen the value of doing mammograms every year, not every other year. 
This past February, one of our own was diagnosed.  She’s the first to tell you that if she’d followed the every other year after age 54, her cancer would have grown to stage 2 or 3.  She’s absolutely certain that annual mammograms work.  
I wonder how many times we’ll have to endure another ‘new’ recommendation.  I remember fifteen years ago when millions of women signed petitions against the USPSTF’s proposed recommendations downgraded screening for forty year olds.  Those signatures stopped the recommendations from being accepted which meant insurance companies had to continue to cover screening mammograms at age 40.
At the end of the day, isn’t that the real issue?  Even the American Cancer Society states that 40 to 44 year-olds should have screening mammograms if “they want to.”
Wanting to and having a test when insurance doesn’t cover it are two very different things. And it’s curious to me that preventative screenings which include mammograms are mandated to be covered by the Affordable Care Act.  I guess these new recommendations, along with others, could in fact wind up negating that law.
And no, this approach isn’t about “empowering” a woman to make that health decision for herself.   One premise being sported behind these recommendations is that they help a woman take her health in her own hands ‘after she’s discussed the pros and cons of having a mammogram against her risk factors with her personal physician.” 
I don’t know many women who have the luxury of having hat discussion with their docs anyway—at least not in the 7 to 10 minutes we get to spend with him or her.   Risk factors?  We’ve learned that being a woman is risk factor enough. 
But what I do know is that we don’t need another reason for a woman to not have annual screenings.  We don’t need another set of barriers.  She already has enough of those.  Between having no time for herself to not having enough money to spend on basics much less screenings that used to be covered, she has enough barriers.  
What she doesn’t have is a guarantee of life when diagnosed late.  No matter how personal the treatment or how good it is, early detection still gives her the best chances.
No matter how they try to spin it, early detection does matter. 
Mammograms matter. 
Women matter. 
In the end, I hope we remember what matters most.