Maimonides’ Pink Runway show returns 
 BY BEN BRACHFELD 
 Maimonides  Medical  Center’s  
 annual “Pink Runway”  
 fashion show to support breast  
 cancer  research,  treatment,  
 and awareness returned to inperson  
 festivities  this month,  
 and on a new stage. 
 The  show  previously  took  
 place at the Marquee nightclub  
 in  Midtown  Manhattan,  and  
 last  year  was  held  virtually,  
 but in 2021 it will be held at the  
 home of the Brooklyn Cyclones,  
 recently renamed Maimonides  
 Park after the hospital bought  
 the naming rights. 
 The show took place on  
 Wednesday, Oct. 13 at 6:30 pm,  
 with a bigger and better runway  
 than ever built between  
 fi rst and third base. 
 “We’re going to make it safe,  
 and at the same time still have  
 a good time,” said Michael Brincat, 
   director  of  special  events  
 and corporate partnerships at  
 Maimonides, and the organizer  
 of Pink Runway for the past  
 seven years. 
 The  show  features  survivors  
 of breast cancer walking  
 a  runway  in  designer  gowns  
 and apparel, an opportunity to  
 feel beautiful again after traumatic  
 cancer treatment that  
 often causes them to lose their  
 hair and see their bodies deteriorate, 
 Don’t delay.   
 Early cancer detection can save lives.  
 Schedule your mammogram today at   
 NewYork-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital’s  
 Women’s Diagnostic Center 646-859-3611. 
 COURIER L 18     IFE, OCTOBER 15-21, 2021 
  Brincat said. 
 Brincat’s mother died  
 from  breast  cancer  in  
 2003, and he does the Pink  
 Runway  each  year  in  her  
 memory. 
 “If you look  
 good, you feel  
 good,” Brincat  
 said, noting  
 his  mother  always  
 had her  
 makeup and wig on. “I make  
 sure these women feel the way  
 I would want my mother to feel  
 on a pink runway.” 
 Pink Runway’s return came  
 after a tough year-and-a-half at  
 Maimonides, which was one  
 of the hardest-hit hospitals in  
 the city at the beginning of the  
 coronavirus’ rampage through  
 New York. The hospital’s  
 Breast Center had to mostly  
 shut down in March 2020 along  
 with the rest of the city, when  
 hospitals were ordered to cancel  
 all elective surgeries. 
 Dr. Donna-Marie Manasseh,  
 the director of breast surgery at  
 Maimonides, said that despite  
 the importance of breast health,  
 and the dire consequences of  
 failing to act quickly, breast cancer  
 surgery was not considered  
 “emergency surgery” and had to  
 shut down, causing massive disruption  
 to the Center’s work. 
 The Center was closed for  
 routine screenings as well; it  
 remained open only for biopsies, 
  performed if a patient felt  
 a lump or other irregularity,  
 or there was other substantial  
 cause for alarm. Surgeries resumed  
 in May 2020, and the  
 Center gradually saw a return  
 to normal. But even as the facility  
 resumes its important  
 work, massive damage has resulted  
 from the pandemic in  
 the fi ght against breast cancer. 
 Throngs of women missed  
 their screenings, or had theirs’  
 delayed, because of the pandemic. 
  And even as the hospital  
 addresses the backlog of  
 screenings as the city inches  
 towards  recovery  (100  percent  
 of Breast Center staff are  
 vaccinated, Manasseh says),  
 by the day people continue  
 to come out of the woodwork  
 and arrive at the hospital for  
 work that should’ve been done  
 months, if not years ago. 
 “People are coming in and  
 saying  they  felt  a  mass  and  
 still delayed their care six  
 or seven months because of  
 COVID,”  said Manasseh, who  
 originally intended  to go into  
 cardiac surgery but switched  
 paths after her mother-in-law  
 died of breast cancer. 
 The  National  Cancer  Institute  
 estimates the US will  
 see about 10,000 additional  
 breast  and  colorectal  cancer  
 deaths over the next decade as  
 a result of screenings delays  
 wrought by the pandemic. 
 “Everything has been focused  
 on COVID, understandably  
 and appropriately,” Manasseh  
 said. “Out of sight, out  
 of mind, unless of course you  
 have, God forbid, a symptom.  
 And being so preoccupied with  
 COVID, and once the world  
 opened up being so preoccupied  
 with  what  happens  with  that  
 and other things, you don’t realize  
 that a year-and-a-half has  
 gone by and you haven’t done  
 whatever you were supposed to  
 do, surveillance-wise.” 
 Manasseh says that she  
 hopes Breast Cancer Awareness  
 Month, ongoing until  
 the end of October, can break  
 through  to  people  that  even  
 amid  a  deadly  global  pandemic, 
   cancer  is  still  rearing  
 its ugly head. 
 “Cancer doesn’t care that  
 COVID’s here, it doesn’t care  
 about whatever’s going on in  
 your life,” Manasseh said. “It’s  
 important to remember, we  
 can’t  do  anything  unless  you  
 show up.” 
 PINK POWER: Maimonides raises funds for breast cancer research  
 at a previous Pink Runway.  Brooklyn Paper fi le photo 
 We are committed to bringing the highest standard of complete breast   
 cancer care to Brooklyn patients and their families. At NewYork-Presbyterian  
 Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, great care is closer than ever. 
 To learn more about breast cancer services,   
 visit nyp.org/brooklyn/breast 
 
				
/breast