Mammograms will be done on state-of-the-art equipment

Published in the Oct. 18 – 31, 2017 issue of Gilroy Life

Photo by Dawn Bussey From left, Chef Carlos Pineda, Mayor Roland Velasco, SLRH CEO John Hennelly, Councilman Dan Harney, Breast Care Center clerk Lindsey Galvan and Chamber board member Lisa Faria help cut the ribbon at the new Breast Care Center at St. Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy.

As Breast Cancer Awareness Month, October is an occasion to consider that more than 16,000 women in Gilroy and Morgan Hill need a mammogram each year. Many of them come from low-income families without insurance.

About 960 of these women will receive a free exam thanks to the $96,000 raised in the Fund a Mammogram Campaign by the St. Louise Regional Hospital Foundation at its Harvest Moon Gala last month.

The mammograms will be done on state-of-the-art digital X-ray equipment in two Breast Care Centers run by the Verity Medical Foundation. One is at the DePaul Health Center in Morgan Hill. The other center is at St. Louise Regional Hospital in Gilroy.

Photo by Marty Cheek Lori Katterhagen, vice president Patient Care and Clinical Services, and Rich Porzio, St. Louise Hospital radiologist, with the new screening machine.

“The gala did a great job,” said Dawn Bussey, marketing and communications director for the Verity Medical Foundation. “They expected to raise $50,000, but thanks to the generosity of donors, they raised nearly twice that.”

Detecting breast cancer in its early stages enables women to gain a better chance of survival with less treatment and pain medication, she said. It also helps save money compared to treatment for more advanced cases of the disease. At a cost of about $100 for each mammogram, many uninsured women in the South Valley will be better able to survive a disease that impacts one of seven women in the United States.

The DePaul center includes a small, spa-like room for women to prepare for the examination and wait for the technician to call them into the adjoining room, said Lori Katterhagen, vice president of Patient Care and Clinical Services.

The room is furnished with a cozy chair. A Zen-like picture and mellow wall colors help create a space that reduces the stress. Women can secure their belongings in a locker, one less thing to worry about.

“The intent is for women to have a more comfortable environment,” she said. “This isn’t an easy procedure so we wanted them to feel comfortable by making it as spa-like as we can.”

The women enter an examination room which has the mammogram screening machine. The Siemens Mammomat Inspiration Prime looks nonthreatening in its pretty pink and white color scheme. The entire exam is set up so that women can be in and out of the process in less than 30 minutes, Katterhagen said.

As the machine compresses the breast, a sensor flashes when it reaches an adequate level so that the breast doesn’t feel as if it will burst, a common challenge with other machines, she said.

“The machine senses the pressure so you can get a good image without feeling too much discomfort,” she said. “It’s cutting-edge technology for the South Valley. It actually delivers, as an extra bonus, 30 percent less radiation.”

One in seven women will face the threat of breast cancer, said Rich Porzio, radiologist for St. Louise. Getting more women to get exams on a regular basis will help reduce the toll of the disease on families. Often, in the early stages, it’s difficult for women to feel the lump because it’s too small for their detection.

“The bottom-line is when it’s detected early, their prognosis is better,” Porzio said.

The American Medical Association and the American Cancer Society have issued guidelines that women older than 40 should get mammograms regularly, and with a history of breast cancer, should get them sooner, said John Hennelly, CEO of St. Louise. With the new Breast Care Centers, more women’s lives will be saved from early cancer detection.

“We needed to make that available and accessible,” he said. “Although a mammogram can’t prevent cancer, it detects changes in the breast early.”

At the Oct. 3 ribbon cutting for the DePaul’s Breast Cancer Center, Morgan Hill Mayor Steve Tate wore a pink T-shirt commemorating October as Breast Cancer Awareness Month. He said he was pleased with the new center’s opportunity for addressing women’s health care needs.

“This is just another indication of where we’re going,” he said.

Marty Cheek