Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jill Biden touts cancer grants

- DEBORAH SULLIVAN BRENNAN

SAN DIEGO — On a visit to San Diego to highlight the administra­tion’s “cancer moonshot” and initiative­s for military families, first lady Jill Biden toured a Logan Heights health clinic Friday to discuss a $100,000 cancer screening grant before greeting crew members of the USS Gabrielle Giffords warship based at Naval Base San Diego.

“Cancer touches all of us; the Bidens are no exception,” said Biden, who had surgery last month to remove a common type of skin cancer and lost a stepson, Beau Biden, to cancer in 2015.

In a roundtable with providers at Logan Heights Family Health Center, she discussed federal efforts to improve cancer screenings and early detection programs for communitie­s with limited health care access.

The administra­tion’s moonshot initiative, which her husband spearheade­d while vice president, aims to improve cancer treatments and conditions for patients and to cut cancer death rates in half within a generation. Its goals include resuming screenings missed because of the pandemic, reducing smoking rates and getting more patients into clinical trials.

The first lady began advocating for cancer education and prevention in 1993, when four of her friends were diagnosed with breast cancer, and she later launched an initiative to educate Delaware high school girls about the importance of breast cancer prevention. She has called for improving cancer screenings, especially those delayed because of the pandemic.

In September, the moonshot program awarded $100,000 to the health center for health navigators and outreach specialist­s to promote early detection, boost screenings and guide patients to high-quality cancer care and treatment. On Thursday, the Biden administra­tion announced an $11 million grant to fund similar programs at 22 other clinics throughout the country.

Those services are important to help people unfamiliar with health care systems manage the shock of a cancer diagnosis and the complex decisions that often must follow, the first lady said.

“You hear cancer, and you don’t hear anything else,” she said.

Christophe­r Gordon, the chief medical officer for Family Health Centers of San Diego, said the grant enables the clinic to help newly diagnosed patients make sense of their treatment options and medical trials and overcome obstacles to care. Clinic officials are measuring how those services affect survival rates and patient outcomes, he said.

“Early detection is the key,” Biden said. “A lot of cancers are curable, and you don’t need to be afraid.”

The first lady next stopped at the USS Gabrielle Giffords to greet about 20 crew members and deliver pizzas from Oggi’s Pizza & Brewing Co. Before boarding the ship, which she christened in 2015, Biden changed from the heels she had been wearing into sneakers to climb ladders on the vessel.

Her final stop was a dinner hosted by the Armed Services YMCA for other Gabrielle Giffords crew members and their families.

“Seeing it today, it’s hard to believe that it was eight years ago that we christened the ship,” she told the sailors, many of them joined by their spouses and children wearing party dresses and tiny suits.

Biden acknowledg­ed the role military families play in supporting service members, calling them as critical to the military mission “as the engine is to the ship.”

“Your health and your happiness matter to us,” she said. “We have to make sure service is a matter of dignity and honor, pride and accomplish­ment for your entire family.”

Rep. Sara Jacobs, D- Calif., who serves on the House Armed Services Committee and was among the elected officials who greeted the first lady at the airport, said she and Biden discussed priorities such as child care for military families during the visit.

After her remarks, Biden stepped behind the dessert bar, where she chatted and took photos with guests while serving mini cupcakes and chocolate chip cookies.

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