36 THE QUEENS COURIER • BREAST CANCER • OCTOBER 14, 2021 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 Mobile bus makes breast cancer screenings more accessible 
 BY JULIA MORO 
 EDITORIALQNS.COM 
 QNS 
 Th  e Mount Sinai Mobile Mammography  
 Unit has partnered with St. Mary’s Hospital  
 for Children in Bayside to provide screenings  
 for their employees during breast cancer  
 awareness month. 
 Mount Sinai has been using this 42-foot  
 bus to provide mammography screenings all  
 over New York City since 2018, although  
 the unit wasn’t functioning at the height  
 of the pandemic. Th  e bus goes to  
 every borough year-round, and has  
 screened about 4,000 patients in total.  
 More than 25 of those 4,000 women  
 were found to have cancerous or  
 precancerous conditions. 
 Th  e mobile unit is meant to provide  
 fast and convenient screenings to  
 make care more accessible. 
 Marianne Muzic, a social worker  
 at St. Mary’s, said she is looking  
 forward to taking advantage of  
 this initiative.  
 “Being a mother of two and  
 working two jobs, it’s very difficult,” 
  Muzic said. “I want to  
 stay healthy and it’s right outside  o u r  
 door of our campus. I’m very grateful  
 to St. Mary’s for partnering with Mount  
 Sinai.” 
 Th  is is St. Mary’s fi rst time partnering  
 with Mount Sinai’s mobile mammography  
 unit. About a year ago, Patricia Hackenjos,  
 the vice president of human resources, said  
 that St. Mary’s conducted a utilization review  
 of their healthcare services provided  
 to its employees and found the participation  
 in cancer screenings was very low, especially  
 for breast cancer. 
 e only reason we could  
 think of for why it was so  
 low was inconvenience,”  
 Hackenjos  said.  “They  
 probably don’t have the  
 time to go to a service  
 provider.” 
 A f t e r  that,  
 St. Mary’s decided to  
 bring in the mobile mammography unit to  
 their Bayside facility. 
 “Early detection is key and we want to  
 make sure our employees are healthy,”  
 Hackenjos said. “Our kids that we serve  
 here depend on every member of the team.” 
 Th  e bus off ers intake forms in 12 languages, 
  said Dr. Laurie Margolies, the chief  
 of Breast Imaging at Mount Sinai Health  
 System. Th  e New York Cancer Services  
 Program will also cover the cost for eligible  
 woman who are uninsured or underinsured.  
 Undocumented immigrants are also able to  
 get screenings paid for by this program. 
 Patients enter the bus, get changed into a  
 gown and go into the screening room. Aft er  
 the screening, the bus goes back to Mount  
 Sinai and images are uploaded. Within a few  
 days, the screenings are read and reports are  
 sent out.  
 Margolies recommended scheduling a  
 follow-up for those who have a fi nding on  
 the mammogram, which is about 10 percent.  
 If a woman needs a biopsy or any further  
 medical treatment, Mount Sinai helps coordinate  
 that.  
 “We’ve gotten very positive feedback from  
 our patients,” Margolies said. “Th ey’re extremely  
 grateful. Th  ey were so afraid to have  
 a mammogram but the bus made it so easy.” 
 One in eight women will be diagnosed  
 with breast cancer at some point in their  
 lives. Margolies feels this program is essential  
 since  it  lowers  the  barriers  and  
 increases  access  that  otherwise  might  
 prevent someone from getting a screening  
 mammography. 
 “It lowers anxiety when we’re at a facility  
 where people feel comfortable,” Margolies  
 said. “If they’re already comfortable at a  
 faith-based group or community center  
 and we’re there and their friends are getting  
 mammograms — I think that’s very helpful.” 
 Th  e mobile unit reaches every corner of  
 the fi ve boroughs, helping women who may  
 not have been able to go to a Mount Sinai  
 facility. 
 “We have great breast imaging services at  
 Mount Sinai Queens and this allows us to  
 expand into other areas that are inaccessible  
 if people have trouble getting to us by bus or  
 train,” Margolies said. 
 Pomonok Houses residents receive free mammograms 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 JBAGCALSCHNEPSMEDIA.COM 
 JENNA_BAGCAL 
 Queens NYCHA residents recently got  
 free mammograms  thanks  to  eff orts  by  
 a local lawmaker ahead of Breast Cancer  
 Awareness Month. 
 On Th  ursday, Sept. 30, Assemblyman  
 Daniel  Rosenthal  teamed  up  with  the  
 Italian-American  Cancer  Foundation  
 and Queens Community House to bring  
 preventative breast cancer screenings to  
 the Pomonok Houses Community Center. 
 Eligible patients signed up for appointments  
 through Rosenthal’s offi  ce or walked  
 into the mobile bus to receive their annual  
 screening. 
 “Early  detection  saves  lives,”  Rosenthal  
 said. “As we assessed the eff ects of  
 the  pandemic  on  preventative  care,  we  
 wanted  to  ensure  that  women  did  not  
 forgo their critical annual exams. I thank  
 the American-Italian Cancer Foundation  
 for providing this crucial service in a safe  
 manner and Queens Community House for  
 their partnership.” 
 Th  is was the third year that the lawmaker  
 hosted the cost-free mammogram service  
 following the New York Breast Law  
 that was enacted in 2017. Under  
 the  legislation,  deductibles  and  
 copayments for all annual screening  
 mammograms  
 were  
 eliminated for  
 women  over  40  
 years old. 
 Accord ing  
 to the Centers  
 for  Disease  
 Control (CDC)  
 a  
 mammogram  
 is  an  X-ray  of  
 the  breast  and  
 is the best way for  
 early  
 breast  cancer  
 detection  for  
 many  women.  
 Regular  mammograms, 
  usually  
 one  
 per year, can  
 lower  a  person’s  
 risk of dying from  
 breast cancer. 
 Rosenthal  said  that  his  offi  ce  
 plans  to  make  free  mammograms  
 available annually for his  
 constituents. 
 Photo courtesy of Mount Sinai 
 Courtesy of Rosenthal’s offi  ce 
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