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Cancer centers work to address late diagnoses in Hispanic women

- By Adriana Morga

In early 2020, a year after Gloria Estrada Hernandez felt a lump in her breast, she was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer.

She was told that her cancer would’ve been less advanced if she would’ve gotten a mammograph­y earlier. Estrada Hernandez said she did tell her doctor about the lump in 2019 but was dismissed because she was “too young” to have cancer.

She was 34 at the time. “They would tell me I had to wait until I’m 40. If I would’ve waited until then I wouldn’t be in this country or in this life, perhaps,” she said, in Spanish.

Originally from Michoacan, Mexico, Estrada Hernandez moved to the United States 12 years ago and now lives in Bridgeport.

When she received her diagnosis, doctors were surprised by her previous doctor’s response to her concerns.

Estrada Hernandez is one of many Hispanic women who are diagnosed in later stages of cancer. According to the American Cancer Society, breast cancer is less likely to be diagnosed at a localized, or early, stage in Hispanic women than in non-Hispanic white women with 59 and 67 percent, respective­ly.

About 430 women were estimated to have died from breast cancer in Connecticu­t in 2019, with breast cancer being the most common cause of cancerrela­ted deaths among Hispanic women that year, according to the Connecticu­t Breast Health Initiative.

Estrada Hernandez, who encourages people to go to the doctor if they feel something abnormal in their body, received her first chemothera­py session in the summer of 2020 and she is currently undergoing follow-up treatment.

She has been a patient of the Norma Pfriem Breast Center since her diagnosis. The center is part of Smilow Cancer Hospital in New Haven and has locations in Bridgeport, Fairfield and Trumbull.

“The need for timely access is very important because once a woman finds a mass in her breast, she wants to be seen immediatel­y,” said Dr. Melanie Lynch, director of breast surgery at the Pfriem center.

The Norma Pfriem Center is an integrativ­e medicine program that supports women as they go through breast cancer treatment.

The program’s services include transporta­tion, rent and child care assistance, counseling, physical therapy and acupunctur­e.

But for many, like Estrada Hernandez, the center also offers support in one significan­t barrier: language.

“It’s hard not to fully understand English. I wish I understood everything, but I unfortunat­ely can’t,” said Hernandez, who relied on the hospital’s interprete­rs since she had to attend appointmen­ts by herself due to COVID-19 safety measures.

But the value of having staff that understand­s the Hispanic community goes beyond just understand­ing the language. It also involves understand­ing people’s background­s. The center has a team of “patient navigators” who work directly with patients to assess their needs outside of their diagnosis to achieve this purpose.

“They bring a different level of expertise,” said Dr. Donna Twist, foundation executive director of the Norma Pfriem Breast Center. She asserted that patient navigators are community experts that support patients with counseling and social work while also understand­ing the cultural context.

“It makes a huge difference to

be able to talk through your fears and anxiety with someone from the same culture, that speaks the same language,” she said.

A similar program is available at the Bridgeport Hospital Primary Care Center, where care coordinato­rs work with small groups of patients.

“We have really focused on the disparitie­s and the inequities of our patients in our community,” said Mary Angelucci, manager care coordinato­r. A successful example of this program are breast examinatio­ns.

Byprovidin­g support for some of the financial barriers for patients, the team has managed to get an 85 percent rate of breast

examinatio­ns and timely preventive care exams, according to Angelucci.

Among some of the examples of how the center supported her, Estrada Hernandez mentioned how she received prepared food after her first chemothera­py so she wouldn’t have to cook.

They also supported her family with rent, since she had to stop working during her treatment.

“I haven’t paid a dime,” said Estrada Hernandez, who said that without the center’s help, she wouldn’t be able to afford the treatment.

“Their help feels different. They are always caring for us,” she said.

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Breast cancer survivor Gloria Estrada Hernandez.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Breast cancer survivor Gloria Estrada Hernandez.

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