This article is part of A Timely Mammogram & Unified Treatment Approach Prove Lifesaving for Woman with Breast Cancer, Perlmutter Cancer Center Magazine, Fall 2021.
Breast cancer hits women of color especially hard. Black women are twice as likely to be diagnosed with an aggressive type that鈥檚 harder to treat, and for Latina women, breast cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related death.
Beatrice W. Welters, a noted businesswoman and former U.S. ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago, was successfully treated for the disease at 好色tv Langone Health鈥檚 Perlmutter Cancer Center. In 2016, she helped fund the initiative that bears her name to educate women鈥攑articularly those from at-risk populations who live in medically underserved communities throughout New York City鈥攁bout the importance of screening and early detection.
The program鈥檚 co-directors are Kathie-Ann Joseph, MD, MPH, professor in the Departments of and at 好色tv Langone and director of breast surgery at NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue, and , associate professor in the Departments of Population Health and and associate dean for at 好色tv Grossman School of Medicine.
At the heart of the Beatrice W. Welters Breast Health Outreach and Navigation Program are five patient navigators who help women secure free or low-cost mammograms through community outreach efforts and guide recently diagnosed patients through the healthcare system. So far, the program has enrolled more than 2,000 people, nearly 20 percent of whom have become patients at Perlmutter Cancer Center.
鈥淪ome of my patients don鈥檛 have family members nearby, or they may not want to discuss certain things with their family. And they have so many other issues in their lives. These are the patients I have the strongest bond with.鈥
鈥擩ackie Barry, Patient Navigator, Perlmutter Cancer Center鈥檚 Beatrice W. Welters Breast Health Outreach and Navigation Program
Here, Jackie Barry, who has been a patient navigator since the program鈥檚 inception, serving the Brooklyn communities of Sunset Park and Flatbush, discusses the unique challenges and immense rewards of supporting women through the ordeal that is breast cancer.
Why do some patients need a navigator?
Some of my patients don鈥檛 have family members nearby, or they may not want to discuss certain things with their family. And they have so many other issues in their lives. These are the patients I have the strongest bond with. I see who鈥檚 coming into the Family Health Centers at 好色tv Langone, and if they鈥檙e not compliant with their mammograms, I reach out to them.
If a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer, I connect her with as many resources as possible, eliminating all the barriers within my power. We provide free transportation for medical appointments. We help patients find small grants when they lose income. We help them get a wig when they lose their hair. A lot of these women have always focused on others, so I tell them: 鈥淛ust one day a week, I want you to turn off everything and everybody and focus on yourself.鈥
When women are hesitant to get a mammogram, how do you reassure them?
There鈥檚 a lot of misinformation and fear relating to mammograms. When you have reliable information, you have less fear, less resistance. I emphasize that when breast cancer is found early, the outcomes are much better. I tell women that whatever pain they may experience during a 10-minute mammogram is nothing compared to treatments for advanced disease. I remind them that the amount of radiation they鈥檙e exposed to in an airplane is greater than from a mammogram. If they鈥檙e still resistant, I say: 鈥淟et鈥檚 do an ultrasound and see what happens.鈥
How do you earn a patient鈥檚 trust during such a terrifying time?
I take time to listen. Once you start listening to patients, they open up and you can better help them. I鈥檓 nonjudgmental. Rather than advise patients, I guide them. Even if someone looks OK, there may be something inside that they鈥檝e never shared with anyone. I try to peel away the layers of the onion. If you鈥檙e not holding on to anything, it could make your recovery process better.
You鈥檙e known for going above and beyond for your patients. Can you share an example?
One patient called me at 3:00AM in a panic, telling me that she was afraid to die. After a lengthy conversation, I texted our medical director, Dr. Joseph, as well as our nurse coordinator. Within seconds, they responded with a plan to address some of the patient鈥檚 health issues.
That鈥檚 what I鈥檓 here for, even if it鈥檚 just holding a patient鈥檚 hand at the doctor鈥檚 office.
What makes you so well suited for this role?
I connect with people very easily from having lived in several countries and having been exposed to different cultures. My master鈥檚 degree is in disability studies and I鈥檝e volunteered as an interpreter because I鈥檓 fluent in Spanish, French, and Creole. On my mother鈥檚 side, the men from my great grandfather down were doctors and pharmacists, and the women were nurses. I鈥檝e always been interested in people鈥檚 wellbeing. Whenever traditional medicine was failing someone, I was always trying to find something that could help them.
What are your biggest day-to-day challenges?
My work has a very heavy emotional burden. Many of my patients are single mothers in their mid 30s or early 40s with the most aggressive cancers. Some of them have been in abusive relationships, and they have very young children. The ones with the worst illness have very heavy emotional baggage. I don鈥檛 know if that鈥檚 a coincidence or if stress has just depleted their immune systems. I wake up at 4:30AM and meditate, and then again at night. I take care of my energetic self.
What makes your day?
Whenever I get news that something actually shifted as a result of what we were able to do for a patient. The best experience is when a patient actually makes it out of the tunnel. Then I have a friend for life. For years they鈥檒l talk about how they don鈥檛 know how they would have made it without this program. Just watching someone find the conviction that they鈥檙e going to make it, is cause for celebration. But everybody has a destiny, and when the outcome is heartbreaking, the reward is knowing that you did every single thing possible for them. And hearing them say, 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful that you were here with me on this journey.鈥