Breast Cancer Awareness Month in Action!


Over the course of 2013, YWCA Women’s Health Outreach will have coordinated and hosted 28 mobile screening events in King County, bringing essential mammogram and pap test screenings to women who are primarily uninsured or underinsured. And, in the month of October, which is Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Women’s Health Outreach will be at 6 screenings all together.

Today, Outreach Specialist Karly Garcia is hosting a mobile screening event at the Mexican Consulate in Seattle’s Belltown neighborhood. By mid-afternoon, 19 women will have had their annual mammogram, and dozens more will have been referred to an upcoming screening event or appointment at a local clinic. If you’re in need of a mammogram, reach out to Karly here.

004

The YWCA’s Karly Garcia in the Mexican Consulate’s Ventanilla de Salud (Health Window), where she shares health information with the community

013

Gloria from Community Health Plan shares information about health coverage at the Mexican Consulate’s Ventanilla de Salud.

009

Today, 19 women will receive a mammogram and pap test in the coach provided by Swedish Medical Center.

012

Alba from Swedish welcomes community members into the mobile screening coach, and Grace Chapman, ARNP, conducts well-women exams for one-stop shopping!

018

Susan G. Komen Interim Executive Director Mona Locke; Consul of Mexico Eduardo Baca Cuenca; YWCA Women’s Health Outreach Program Manager Ingrid Berkhout; Susan G. Komen Director of Grants, Education, and Advocacy Elisa del Rosario; Susan G. Komen Community Outreach Coordinator Silvia Kennedy; Grace Chapman, ARNP; and Mexican Consulate Consul for Community Outreach Lilian Cordoba Vazquez.

Many thanks to all our partners for making this a successful event!

Swedish Medical Center Opens New Dental Clinic for Low-Income Patients


In Washington State, we are seeing program after program cut, year after year. When we keep having to fight for the Washington state legislature to fund existing programs like the Breast, Cervical & Colon Program, Basic Health, and Maternity Support Services, it is thrilling to see new health care services and initiatives.

In September 2011, Swedish Medical Center’s Community Specialty Clinic added new specialty dental care programming to serve adults who are uninsured or underinsured, and have low incomes. Services provided at the clinic are focused on complex specialty care (like complex tooth extractions) rather than preventative and primary dental care (like cleanings and fillings). Care will be provided by dentists and oral surgeons volunteering their time through the Seattle-King County Dental Society. As the program evolves, they plan to start providing other complex services like root canals.

Swedish Community Specialty Clinic is partnering with Project Access Northwest to “provide patient triage and case management… and to help with dentist scheduling and arranging patient visits.” Project Access Northwest, formerly King County Project Access, collaborates with providers in the health care community to open doors to medical and dental care for individuals with limited access.

Swedish and Project Access Northwest are doing their best to fill the health care gaps they see in our communities. One way of addressing those gaps most recently has been providing dental care for patients awaiting kidney transplants. In order for a patient to receive a transplant, she must be cleared by a dentist. If a patient has dental infections, she must have a full extraction done before the transplant. Patients had been having a difficult time getting dental care; there were either no dentists providing the clearance or it was too expensive for the patients. Since the fall and in partnership with the Northwest Kidney Foundation, the Swedish Community Specialty Clinic has provided 10 kidney transplant patients with the necessary dental care, and they are ready for more!

In order to access care at the Swedish Community Specialty Clinic, patients must receive a referral through a community health clinic. All referrals from primary care providers at community health clinics must go through Project Access Northwest.

To contact the Community Specialty Clinic, please visit their website or call 206.860.6656. They are also located in the Heath Building at 801 Broadway, Suite 901, in Seattle’s First Hill neighborhood.

Information on Swedish Community Specialty Clinic found at Seattle Local Health Guide.

Bringing Mammograms to LBTQ Women at the Wild Rose


Why is it important for women who are lesbian, bisexual, transgender/sexual and queer (LBTQ) to be regularly screened for breast and cervical cancers?

Women who are LBTQ have higher risks of breast and cervical cancers than heterosexual women. They’re also more likely to have lower incomes and be uninsured or under-insured, making them less likely to be screened. YWCA Women’s Health Outreach holds two mobile screening events each year to provide these critical services to women who are LBTQ in our community. Last weekend, Program Manager Ingrid Berkhout and Health Access and Volunteer Coordinator Samantha Tripoli joined up with the Wild Rose bar, Swedish Medical Center and Beth Kruse, ARNP, to screen 19 women!

Watch this video below to hear the stories of LBTQ women, volunteers and health care provider Beth Kruse!