This Resolution Could Save Your Life
By
Carol
Spence
LEXINGTON,
Ky., (Jan. 3, 2007) – When it comes to New Year’s resolutions,
some are trivial – resolving to hang up your clothes, for
instance – while others can be life-changing. For women over 50
or with a history of ovarian cancer in their family, resolving
to participate in the Ovarian Cancer Screening Research Program
at the University of Kentucky might very well fit into the
latter category.
“Ovarian cancer is such a silent killer,” said Edith Lovett,
family and consumer sciences agent with the University of
Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service in Cumberland County.
“You can have ovarian cancer and never know it, and by the time
you find out it’s just really serious.”
“The idea behind the
study is to prove that screening detects early cancers and saves
lives,” said Dr. Edward J. Pavlik, director of the Ovarian
Cancer Screening Research Program, the only study of its kind in
the nation.
Since its inception in
1988, the program has screened more than 26,000 participants by
transvaginal ultrasound. Out of 130,000 screenings, 400 tumors
have been detected and death due to ovarian cancer has been
markedly reduced in the group screened, as compared to the
general population.
“Basically there’s
biological onset of disease and then there’s symptoms onset,”
Pavlik said. “What we’re attempting to do is detect the cancer
between these,” thus improving the chance for survival.
For that reason Lovett,
other FCS agents and members of the Kentucky Extension
Homemakers Association around the state work hard to make women
aware of the benefits of this simple and free test offered by
UK’s Markey Cancer Center. From collecting an extra dollar from
Homemakers’ dues each year, to holding fundraisers, to
transporting women from all over the state to Lexington or local
outreach centers to get the annual test, Extension has made the
battle against ovarian cancer a personal one. In fact,
Homemakers’ commitment to the cause predates the 1988 beginning
of the screening program by 10 years. René Siria, state
president of Homemakers said they started contributing to
research projects at UK in 1978.
“Our membership has gone
down over the last 28 years, but our contributions have gone up
because a lot of counties and areas have been doing special
events and things to raise additional money,” she said.
As Homemakers president,
Siria has challenged the group to reach $1 million in donations
to the screening program by 2008, the 75th
anniversary of Extension Homemakers. To date they have raised
$885,550 through donations and fundraisers.
Pavlik said that the
program, which has annual costs of approximately $1 million, has
benefited from its relationship with the Kentucky Extension
Homemakers Association.
“The real contribution
of the KEHA is participation,” he said. “I wouldn't be surprised
if 30 to 50 percent of all of the 28,000 participants have been
KEHA members, but I don't track this. It is just my impression
or guess.”
Pavlik said one of the
reasons for the high level of participation is due to the
efforts of “certain family and consumer agents that are
absolutely heroic in their continuing efforts to bring
participants to screening.”
Ann Bradley, family and
consumer sciences Extension agent in Letcher County, has been
transporting vanloads of women to Lexington for screening since
1990. She makes the 6-hour round trip from Letcher County to
Lexington with more than 200 women each year. The trips are open
to everyone, not just members of Homemakers.
“Local doctors and the
local health department refer people to the program,” she said.
“I don’t ever like to turn anybody down. We’re just far enough
away that a lot of ladies won’t just go on their own, but they
like to go with a group and have the screening done.”
For those women who
can’t make the long trip to Lexington, five outreach centers
have been set up in Maysville, Prestonsburg, Somerset,
Elizabethtown and Paducah. The centers are open once a month in
Maysville, three days a month in Prestonsburg, Elizabethtown and
Paducah, and twice a month in Somerset.
“The outreach program
was designed for those women who maybe didn’t have a car that
was that dependable or couldn’t get off from work,” Pavlik said.
Extension Homemaker Ann
Boatwright was a driving force in working with Dr. Pavlik to
establish these mobile screening units. Boatwright, herself, did
not participate in the screenings. She was diagnosed with
ovarian cancer after the disease had progressed too far to be
cured. She became a strong advocate for the program. Siria
remembers the last convention Boatwright attended before her
death from the disease.
“The speech she gave at
the convention – the last one she came to – was ‘Ladies, I was
stupid. I should have been doing this and maybe I wouldn’t be
suffering like this,’” Siria said.
“She was quite a vocal
and loud supporter of it (the screening program) when she
realized she had made a mistake, herself,” she said. “A lot of
people bring her up as someone to admire, because she clearly
encouraged a lot more people to get involved.”
Pavlik remembers
Boatwright as a “really powerful, strong woman,” whose efforts
in creating the mobile units helped to bring more women into the
program.
The screening program
wins high praise from agents such as Bradley, who says they’ve
been blessed to be part of it.
“They’re making a great
program,” she said. “Aside from the medical benefits, it’s an
emotionally up-building program and psychologically and every
way. They make the ladies who come feel good about themselves.”
Pavlik said they have no
plans to end the study, which is now in its 18th
year.
“We want women to know
that we’ll never be saying to them that they should stop
coming,” he said. “The only reason for them to stop coming is if
they no longer have ovaries. So once you’re in the study, it’s
something that you can do annually until you’re 120 years old.”
For more information
about the UK Ovarian Cancer Screening Research Program, talk to
your local county Extension family and consumer sciences agent,
visit the screening program’s Web site at http://clik.to/ovary
or call 800-766-8279. |