By
Keryn Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- When
her little sister died shortly after being diagnosed with
breast cancer, grief wasn't the only emotion Peggy Crawford
felt. "My
younger sister, Marsha, died at 45 years old, within 50
weeks of learning she had breast cancer. That really ticked
me off," Crawford said. Marsha left an 8-year-old daughter
behind. Instead
of remaining angry, Crawford started BATTLE, an acronym for
Breast cancer Awareness To Teach Ladies Early detection.
"Nine
years ago I sat down with my good friend Glenda Gregory, who
was the Winston County Extension home economist, and asked
her if she would partner with me on this," Crawford said.
"We devised our protocol for BATTLE and began getting out
information on the program." Crawford
was a member of the Mississippi Academy of Family Physicians
Alliance, a group of physicians' spouses. For the first
several years of the program, that organization partnered
with Mississippi State University's Extension Service to
provide breast cancer awareness programming. Last year, the
Winston County Medical Center became a BATTLE
partner. Crawford
and Gregory saturated the state with information in those
first years on breast cancer awareness and prevention. The
program was so successful that the two women were invited to
the Information and Quality Healthcare Foundation in Jackson
to explain the program's success. "We
were the best in the state per capita for women 50 to 65
years old getting mammograms done. We kept that record for
seven years -- we just lost it this year by a fraction of a
point to Ackerman," Crawford said. "That's because of this
program." Gregory's
decision to become involved with BATTLE also was motivated
by family: her mother had breast cancer, which was detected
by a mammogram. Gregory said that experience showed her the
importance of women having yearly mammograms. She said the
program's impact on Winston County women and men has been
tremendous. "When
we started out with the program, 34 percent of the ladies in
Winston County over the age of 65 received mammograms. The
last report we got showed around 67 percent received
mammograms," Gregory said. "I don't know that BATTLE was the
sole reason for this increase, but I do know it has made an
impact on the ladies." Gregory
said the program is a result of two people getting involved
in an awareness program and the county embracing
it. "Without
the support of individuals, businesses, doctors and the
hospital, this program could not have been such a success.
In the last few years, a planning committee was formed. This
committee meets to plan our luncheon and shares in the work
pulling it all together," Gregory said. Local
doctors approve of the program and support it by purchasing
tables at the BATTLE luncheon and fashion show. The first
BATTLE luncheon was held six years ago and served 32 guests.
Now that number has grown to 325, with only space limiting
further growth. "The
first luncheon we had, the idea was to buy a ticket for
yourself and one for an underserved person who might not
normally have an annual mammogram. The next year, we started
selling tables to businesses and individuals. A table seats
six people, and sponsoring one table allows six people to
eat, receive information on breast cancer prevention and see
the fashion show," Gregory said. The
luncheon features a well-known breast cancer-related keynote
speaker, often a survivor or relative of a survivor.
Crawford said the first keynote speaker was a young man
whose presentation was called "What it's like when your
mother has breast cancer." "There
wasn't a dry eye in the room -- men and women were crying,"
she said. For
the fashion revue, breast cancer survivors model clothes
from stores in Winston County. As each model walks the
runway, an emcee tells how long the model has been a
survivor. The
program is such a success that other Mississippi counties
now hope to start their own BATTLE groups. Crawford credits
the program's success to the firm grasp breast cancer has on
people's lives. "Everyone
is touched by breast cancer in some fashion because we all
have a mother, a grandmother, a sister, a wife -- and even
our daughters can get this disease," Crawford
said. Though
she lost her own sister, Crawford's hope is that awareness
will prevent other young women from losing their lives.
"We
really believe that when God closes one window, He opens
another one somewhere," she said. "If Marsha hadn't died, I
wouldn't have gotten involved with BATTLE." -30- Released:
Dec. 9, 2004
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
![]()
Program helps
women BATTLE
breast cancer
Contact: Glenda Gregory, (662) 773-2882
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:08
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fcenews/fce04/041209cancer.html
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