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Lombardi Magazine
Outreach
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A Two-Way Street:
Outreach to the Community and Access to Lombardi
It would be easy to assume that Lombardi's
cancer education and community outreach programs would be a one-way street - faculty and
staff reaching out to the greater Washington D.C. community.
However, that is not how Lombardi defines it. Under the leadership of Jeanne Mandelblatt,
MD, MPH, Associate Director for Cancer Prevention and Control, and Robert Warren, MD,
Director of Clinical Affairs, Lombardi builds partnerships with community organizations
and agencies that already serve those communities. However, they also may bear the
greatest burden of cancer and may have the fewest resources to reduce its impact.
In addition to going out and meeting with the community in their own backyard, Lombardi
is finding new and innovative ways to assist community members to access Lombardi research
and service programs. In many medically under-served communities, seeking preventive or
treatment services at a prestigious health care facility may seem impossible. However,
Lombardi is facilitating access to care at Lombardi and access to Lombardi cancer
prevention, early detection and treatment research trials.
Among the Lombardi outreach programs that serve this function are:
- Cancer Screening and Education. Offered throughout the year, Lombardi sponsors a
variety of prostate and breast cancer screening programs. Under the leadership of Kathyrn
Taylor, Ph.D., and funded by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Lombardi has been
working in partnership with the Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of the District of
Columbia for the past year to determine the best approach to educate African American men
about the pros and cons of prostate cancer screening.
- SHARE Health Project. The Self-Help And Resource Exchange
Health Project is a partnership between Lombardi, Washington Hospital Center and
SHARE-D.C., a non-profit food and community service program. SHARE provides access to
high-quality food at low cost to 12,000 to 15,000 D.C. regional families every month who
purchase food through their membership in over 300 SHARE Host Organizations (e.g.,
churches, tenants associations). Two hours of volunteer service and $14 cash or food
stamps allows SHARE participants to purchase a package of food with a retail value of
$30-$35. The SHARE Health Project, under the leadership of Caroline Burnett, RN, ScD,
trains SHARE volunteers to become Lay Health Advocates, and partners them with Georgetown
University Nursing and other students to promote health and control cancer. For more
information about the SHARE Health Project go to: http://www.sharehealth.org
- Celebremos la Vida, which translates as "Let's celebrate life." This
free screening clinic, supported by the Cancer Research Foundation of America, provides
Latin American women, ages 40 and older, access to free breast and cervical cancer
screening services. The clinic is open one Saturday a month, in Northern Virginia, and
provides bilingual service providers, health educators and volunteers to meet the needs of
women whose lack of insurance or citizenship documentation would otherwise represent
insurmountable barriers to these life-saving services. In addition to providing free
screening services, Lombardi works with GUMC's Radiology, Surgery and Hematology/Oncology
clinical programs to provide free care for women needing diagnostic follow-up and
treatment.
- The Latin American Cancer Research Coalition (LACRC). As part of a recently
funded NCI cooperative agreement, Elmer Huerta, Ph.D. (Principal Investigator, Washington
Hospital Center) and Dr. Jeanne Mandelblatt (Research Director) are partnering with the
Georgetown University Schools of Nursing, Medicine and Business, five community-based
primary care clinics serving D.C. area Latin Americans, ACS, and the NCI Cancer
Information Service to:
- promote cancer prevention and control awareness and behavior change, and
- promote participation in cancer clinical trials among the rapidly growing and unique
Central and South American immigrant population of greater D.C.
The overall goal of the LACRC is to pair culturally appropriate social marketing
approaches to promote health and prevent cancer among Latin Americans. It will focus on
primary care clinic-based interventions that reinforce these marketing approaches, and
integrate cancer prevention and control into the every day operations of these extremely
busy clinics.
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