For Joan Venticinque, 56, breast cancer advocacy is a full-time job, but she tries to fit some graphic design work in her week to make a living.
Venticinque, a two-time breast cancer survivor, serves as a volunteer patient navigator for
Venticinque is attending SABCS for the second time as an advocate through the Alamo Breast Cancer Foundation, which has been providing scholarships for breast cancer survivors to attend the symposium for a decade. Each advocate is required to attend all SABCS sessions and write on one “hot topic” for material the foundation distributes after the
“My dream is to be a paid patient navigator where I am with a patient from diagnosis through survivorship,” she says. “To be that person that can help guide them through the medical maze of getting well. In my volunteer job at Breast Cancer Connections, I have served as that person, especially for the poor and underserved.”
But Venticinque says the political aspects of the disease must also be part of her work, and she has been to
“They want information on triple negative breast cancer and also on metastatic treatments,” she says.
Venticinque was diagnosed the first time in 1998 with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), a common form of non-invasive breast cancer, in the left breast and then again in 2003 with an invasive tumor in the right breast, at which time she had bilateral mastectomies.
Read more of CURE's coverage of the 31st annual San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium at http://media.curetoday.com/htmlemail/sabcs.
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