
Fighting
for Accessible Services to
Beat Breast Cancer
By Rachel Ross

Breast cancer survivor Nancy Becker Kennedy says a new surgical
technique helped her preserve her mobility. |
Every woman knows the guidelines: Do a breast
self-exam every month. Never ignore a lump. Get the recommended mammograms and see
your doctor regularly. With breast cancer, early detection is the key to survival.
But how can you do a breast self-exam if your hands don't work? How can you get
a mammogram if the machine isn't accessible? How can you see your doctor regularly
if you don't have transportation you can use?
Most women with disabilities have faced these difficulties, and some have found
creative solutions. All too many others have had to compromise.
"When we talk with disabled women about their experience of getting mammograms,"
says Margaret Nosek, director of the Center for Research on Women with Disabilities
at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, "all they talk about is how
hard it is--the inaccessibility of the equipment, the unwillingness of the technicians
to work with them and the perception that their physicians are less likely to recommend
mammography." Yet a CRWD National Study of Women with Physical Disabilities
found that disabled women are at least as likely to get their scheduled mammograms
as nondisabled women. So a key issue, Nosek says, is not compliance but the quality
of the recorded image. She illustrates with her own experience:
"The only time I ever went," she recalls, "they told me they could
only examine 10 percent of my breast. It's very difficult to position me where they
can take a good image. So if I had to fill out a survey that asked if I've had a
mammogram, I would say yes. But it was a totally ineffective mammogram."
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An Accessible Clinic
Breast Health Access for Women with Disabilities, in Oakland, Calif., may be the
nation's only breast health center designed specifically for disabled women. BHAWD
teaches breast self-examination, and provides clinical breast exams (free for women
who can't do their own self-exams) and referrals for accessible mammography.
"It takes an hour for each breast the way they teach it," says breast
cancer survivor Judi Rogers. "You do a light touch, a medium touch and a deep
touch, and you move an eighth of an inch all the way across the breast. No doctor
is going to take that amount of time, and it's too hard to expect a loved one or
significant other to do it. What if they miss it? All that guilt that goes along
with it."
BHAWD positions itself as a national model for other communities.
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That's not good enough, says Debra Shabas, director of the Initiative for Women with
Disabilities at the Hospital for Joint Diseases in New York City. "It's important
that both views be done and the entire breast imaged," she says. "If it's
a well done mammogram, the accuracy should be much better than [the usual] 10 to
30 percent false negative. But it's often so poorly done on women with disabilities
that it gives them a false sense of security. Dr. Sandra Welner had one woman who
had a breast mass so large you could see it from across the room. She sent her for
a mammogram just to get an idea of exactly how large it was and the mammogram came
back as normal!"
There have been no studies to determine the incidence of breast cancer in women
with disabilities, Nosek says, but she concludes that they are at elevated risk for
delayed diagnosis "due to environmental, attitudinal and information barriers."
Accessible Mammography
Bennett X-ray Technologies makes the only mammography machine accessible to many
women with disabilities, although it's difficult to use by some women with trunk
weakness. Nosek says success often depends on a technician who knows how to adjust
the equipment and is willing to work on positioning.
Judy Panko Reis, director of the Health Resource Center for Women with Disabilities
at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, says she knows a woman who, because of
her scoliosis, has never had even an "accessible" mammography machine work
for her. Another friend was told by her local hospital that if she couldn't stand,
she couldn't have a mammogram. "Obviously they didn't have a Bennett unit,"
Panko Reis says, "but they didn't make any effort to find one for her. We need
a comprehensive, local way to identify user-friendly equipment."
Barbara Waxman, ADA project director for the California Family Health Council
in Cupertino, Calif., says any health care agency receiving federal or state funding
must either have accessible breast cancer screening equipment or make arrangements
for accessible service at an alternative site. She suggests looking at large university
hospitals, or calling Bennett for a list of facilities using their machines.
Even in large cities, you may have to search. "There are three Bennett machines
in Manhattan," says Shabas. "One is at Columbia, and the other two are
in inaccessible buildings."

Mary Martz believes her regular breast self-exams saved her
life. |
Survivors
New Mobility interviewed three disabled breast cancer survivors with widely varying
experiences. Mary Martz, 51, a fine arts consultant and polio quadriplegic from Claremont,
Calif., had surgery the day after her cancer was diagnosed in 1987. No lymph nodes
were involved, and there has been no recurrence. She says her mammogram technicians,
gynecologist, surgeon and oncologist all were responsive to her needs. "My experience
with breast cancer has been very positive," she says.
Judi Rogers, 52, from El Cerrito, Calif., works at Through the Looking Glass,
a Berkeley-based resource center on parenting, and is hemiplegic from cerebral palsy.
Although she noticed a change in her breast tissue doing breast self-examination
(BSE), she lost a year of potential treatment because her mammogram came back negative.
"I thought I was OK," she says. "A year later they discovered the
breast cancer in the next mammogram."
Comedian, activist and actress Nancy Becker Kennedy, 46, is a C5-6 quad from Los
Angeles. "It was right before I got the part on The Louie Show," she says,
"so it was a very exciting time for me. I was at the mammography center arranging
interviews when they found something." That was in 1996. She had a lumpectomy--and
a new surgical technique that spared her the lymphedema experienced by many survivors
(see sidebar below)--and is now in a low recurrence group.
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Risk Factors
You may be at increased risk for breast cancer if you:
- Have a family history of breast cancer
- Have never been pregnant or given birth
- Are over 50
- Are overweight
- Are peri-menopausal
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Detection and Diagnosis
Martz noticed pain in one part of her breast and a thickening of the tissue, but
no lump. Even though pain is not a typical symptom of breast cancer, her gynecologist
ordered a mammogram and a biopsy.
Martz had done regular breast self-exams, and believes it paid off. "It's
really important because it's a way to know your body," she says. "And
the more we have a real sense of our bodies, the more we can talk to our doctors
knowledgeably."
Rogers attributes her late diagnosis to meager information, even though she had
had yearly mammograms and could do her own BSE. She found puckered tissue and immediately
informed her doctor, but accepted the negative mammogram as gospel. "I didn't
know that there is a 10 percent to 30 percent false negative rate," she says.
"I didn't know that puckering is a 100 percent guarantee that you have cancer.
Somehow in my fantasies--because everyone talks about mammograms, mammograms, mammograms--I
thought I was OK.
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On Positive Thinking
"The positive thinking Nazis were always telling me what I should and shouldn't
eat. I detested them, and they made for some of the worst moments in my recovery.
I was already living so clean, there was very little I could clean up. There's this
crazy, frantic thing that somehow you can control this stuff, but I do not know how
to make cells divide normally and I want the universe to stop telling me. I really
think it's a very freakish control movement."
--Nancy Becker Kennedy
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"A mammogram isn't the be-all and end-all the way they let women think it is,"
Rogers says. "Disability or not, more women find the lump themselves before
the mammogram does. That's what I saw in my breast cancer support group."
Kennedy's diagnosis was delayed for different reasons. "I have fibrocystic
breasts--very lumpy breasts--which 40 percent of women have," she says. "So
I gave up caffeine and chocolate, as much as I could, and I've gone for yearly mammograms
since I was 38. When my gynecologist told me to get a mammogram, I didn't think anything
of it because they were always feeling lumps," she says.
Since her surgery, Kennedy has relied on clinical breast examinations. "I
go to my gynecologist for breast exams because I don't have enough feeling in my
fingers. But I tell you, it's hard for able-bodied women to feel this stuff and it's
a heavy thing to lay on your attendant. I think a clinical breast exam every three
months with your personal physician is the way." And try to find and stay with
one doctor, Kennedy urges. "I was going to a clinic where I had a different
doctor each time," she says. "They can't do your breast exams as well as
someone who does it all the time."
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A Gentler Biopsy
Traditionally, a routine part of breast cancer surgery is axillary dissection, in
which twenty-some lymph nodes are removed from the armpit closest to the affected
breast. If cancer cells have spread, these nodes are their primary destination. But
axillary dissection often leads to lymphedema, a complication that can include swelling,
numbness, pain and stiffness of the arm and shoulder.
In a new and simpler technique called sentinel node biopsy or lymphoscintigraphy,
surgeons inject a blue dye to identify the sentinel node, the first node spreading
cancer cells will reach. That node is removed for immediate biopsy. If it is free
of canceróas it generally is in women with small tumorsóit can be predicted with
high accuracy that the remaining nodes will also be cancer-free. Usually, no other
nodes are removed, although some surgeons remove one additional node on each side.
In either case, there's no lymphedema.
Breast cancer survivor Nancy Becker Kennedy says the new surgery is what kept
her mobile after surgery. "If I have swollen wrists, that's a day I don't drive,"
she says. "So sparing me lymphedema was huge. Every woman should ask about this
surgery."
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"All breast cancer is not detected by mammography and all breast cancer is not
detected by BSE," concludes Mary Smith, a founder of the Breast Health Access
for Women with Disabilities clinic in Berkeley, Calif. (see sidebar). "It's
the combination that's important."
The following guidelines for early detection are adapted from Y-ME, a national
breast cancer counseling and referral organization:
- If you're between 40 and 50, get a mammogram every one to two years. After 50,
get one every year.
- See your doctor regularly. A clinical breast examination should be part of your
routine checkup. After age 40, get checked at least once a year.
- Perform BSE once a month. Check for lumps, thickening, changes in the size or
shape of the breast, bloody discharge from the nipple and any change in skin texture.
EDITOR'S NOTE, 2003: The FDA has approved a hand-held detection device call the BreastView Visual Mapping System. Although its maker, Medical Tactile Inc., is still a young company, this product could revolutionize breast cancer screening for women with disabilities.
Treatment and Recovery
After her diagnosis, Martz required a modified radical mastectomy but no radiation
or chemotherapy. "It was a very small mass, it was the kind of cancer that doesn't
spread," she says. For her, treatment and recovery were relatively simple.
Rogers had a mastectomy followed by chemotherapy. "It wiped my body out systematically,"
she says. "After the last chemo my body told me I was dying." What she
needed was Epogene, a red blood cell stimulating factor, but her managed care company
wouldn't pay for the drug until her husband, a doctor, fought for it. "With
Epogene," she says, "I turned around and started living again."
Kennedy had a lumpectomy. Because her tumor was 3 cm in diameter, she also needed
chemotherapy and radiation for six months. "They didn't think I could withstand
it," she says. "I could have finished the chemo and then done the radiation,
but I wanted to be done with everything."
Kennedy is particularly grateful for sentinel node biopsy [see sidebar], a new
procedure that spared her lymph nodes. But her recovery was physically and emotionally
arduous. "Chemo undermines your health, but it's wonderful because it kills
cancer cells," she says. "It's not good for your kidneys or your bladder.
It puts you into menopause. You get fragmented. I got extremely weak and sick, my
skin broke down and I was getting infections. I gained a lot of weight. I had the
feeling that my youth was gone. You just feel so vulnerable, you get nutty."

Judi Rogers lost a year of treatment because of an inaccurate
mammogram.
Photo by Suzanne C. Levine |
Kennedy saw her recovery as a growth experience. "You have a sense that you
may only be four months away from bad news so you take no crap," she says. "You
cut to the chase. Before you have a life-threatening illness, you have a lot of denial
about your mortality. Once you have one, you have an appropriate response. I have
a different consciousness now that has made my life much better."
These women have moved on with their lives, and their survival is evidence that
the combination of breast examination, mammography and regular doctor visits are
an effective defense against breast cancer. Their experience also speaks to the need
for improved access to early detection.
Unfortunately, women can't count on the ADA to make the case for accessible mammography
and medical environments. "All it says is that accommodations have to be user-friendly,"
says Panko Reis. "That, unfortunately, is open to interpretation by the provider."
Ultimately, women with disabilities need to count on themselves.
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Breast Cancer Facts
- Most breast irregularities are found by women themselves. (Y-ME)
- Eighty percent of breast lumps found are not cancerous. (Y-ME)
- One in nine women will develop breast cancer. (American Cancer Society)
- The five-year survival rate after treatment for localized breast cancer is 93
percent. (Y-ME)
- The average lump found by women who do regular breast self-exams is 1.3 cm. In
women who do not practice BSE, it's 3.8 cm. Larger lumps are more likely to have
spread. (Published studies)
- Women over 50 account for 75 percent of all breast cancer cases, yet almost half
do not get regular mammograms. (Blue Cross Blue Shield)
- Beginning in January 1998, Medicare will cover annual screening mammograms for
all beneficiaries over 40. (President Clinton)
- Early detection can save your life. (Absolutely everybody)
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