dismiss

Webinar : L'évolution du service de l'équipement /Apprenez plus/registre

Other Headlines

Leading job search engine provides notable data.
The American College of Radiology announced it will be among the first to apply for authority to accredit freestanding diagnostic imaging centers as required by new CMS rules.
Get comprehensive ultrasound application training.
Future-focused performance management system prepares hospital leaders for the changing health care environment.
Bringing It In: Injectors are an important part of the imaging process

Have News for Us?

Submit your news on the industry, people, or companies.

Forward to a Friend

More People & Company Headlines

Chairman Rockefeller Sends Open Letter to CIGNA on Insurance Practices Letter critical of industry medical loss ratio information.

TriMedx to Join Pre-RSNA Webinar on Equipment Service -- You're Invited to Attend "The Evolution of Equipment Service: How to Navigate Through Tough Financial Times" will be hosted by DOTmed on Nov. 18th. Sponsored by ReMedPar.

ASTRO: Hologic MammoSite Radiation Therapy Keeps Cancer From Recurring Breast cancer patients treated with Hologic's MammoSite radiation therapy system experienced less than a 4% rate of recurring cancer after five years.

This Month in Medical History: Facing the World Again A face transplant transformed surgery in November 2005.

MEDICA 2009 Preview The 41st World Forum for Medicine International Trade Fair with Congress will be held November 18-21, 2009 in Dusseldorf, Germany.

Stryker Biotech and Management Charged With Fraudulent Marketing Scheme Company accused of promoting unauthorized mixture of OP-1 and Calstrux for invasive surgeries.

Merck and Schering-Plough Merge Second recent blockbuster pharma fuse.

Recall: Cordis CROSSOVER Sheath Introducer Attention: Interventional radiological healthcare professionals, hospital risk managers.

Leasing as the Bridge over Troubled Waters Credit crunch leads to looking at leasing options for practices.

Focus on Performance: What to Do About Regulation? A columnist weighs in from DOTmed Business News.

American Society for Therapeutic
Radiology and Oncology

L.A. Breast Cancer Activist Honored With Survivor Circle Award

by Barbara Kram, Editor
Fairfax, Va. - The American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology is pleased to announce that Stefanie LaRue of Woodland Hills, Calif., has been selected as the 2007 Survivor Circle Award winner. Ms. LaRue will be presented with her award and a $1,000 cash prize on Sunday, October 28, 2007, at 8:00 a.m. at the Los Angeles Convention Center during ASTRO's 49th Annual Meeting, which will take place October 28 through November 1 in Los Angeles.

The Survivor Circle Award recognizes a person living with cancer in the Los Angeles metropolitan area who has devoted his or her time to helping others who are living with cancer in their community. Ms. LaRue was diagnosed with Stage-4 Advanced/Metastatic Breast Cancer in 2005 at the age of 30. Before receiving her diagnosis, she was misdiagnosed by three doctors who told her that she probably had a breast infection because she was too "young and healthy" to have breast cancer. Ms. LaRue now devotes her time to educating men as well as women and the medical and insurance communities about diagnosing breast cancer and preventing misdiagnoses in women under the age of 40.

"It is always inspiring to see a person who is diagnosed with a very devastating type of cancer at a young age turn that experience into an opportunity to educate and help others who are in a similar situation" Louis Harrison, M.D., a radiation oncologist at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City and president of the Board of Directors for ASTRO. "Ms. LaRue's dedication to her cause will hopefully raise awareness that breast cancer can strike at any age."

According to the Young Survival Coalition, an international, nonprofit organization dedicated specifically to the issues and concerns of young women with breast cancer, there are more than 250,000 women in the U.S. under the age of 40 who are living with breast cancer; however, there is no effective screening tool for this age group.

Ms. LaRue founded the LaRue Foundation as a platform to build awareness of breast cancer in young women. Her mission is to prevent more women from being misdiagnosed strictly because of their age and not fitting "the profile". She is a Project LEAD graduate and is actively involved in the Young Survival Coalition, American Cancer Society, Living Beyond Breast Cancer, Y-ME National Breast Cancer Organization, the Metastatic Breast Cancer Network, and the Los Angeles Breast Cancer Alliance, as well as other organizations. Ms. LaRue has also attended the National Breast Cancer Coalition Conference in Washington, D.C., testifying in front of Congress for the past two years as one of the youngest of 600 omen lobbying for passage of the National Breast Cancer and Environmental Research Act. While receiving radiation therapy treatments at UCLA, Ms. LaRue was a participant in the award winning documentary "The Quiet War," a movie profiling five diverse women living with Metastatic Breast Cancer.

"I wish I would have heard about someone like me, at my age, getting breast cancer before I got sick," Ms. La Rue said. "That is why I am so dedicated and passionate about truly branding breast cancer in younger women. There are new voices, new faces affected by this disease and people need to pay urgent attention to the message...this could happen to you, too!"

The Survivor Circle was established in 2003 as a way for ASTRO to give back to the cities that it visits during its Annual Meeting. Each year, ASTRO partners with two local organizations to establish relationships with patient advocacy organizations and radiation oncologists and to raise money to support these groups in their work to help people living with cancer and their loved ones. This year ASTRO has partnered with The Wellness Community - South Bay Cities and Vital Options International.

The ASTRO Annual Meeting is the premier scientific meeting in radiation oncology and attracts more than 11,000 oncologists of all disciplines, physicists, biologists, nurses and other healthcare professionals from all over the world. The theme of this year's meeting is "Treating Cancer while Preserving Quality of Life" and the program will promote interdisciplinary collaboration and the exchange of ideas, information and practical solutions for prevention, organ function preservation, treatment options and quality of life for patients.

For more information on Survivor Circle, the Survivor Circle Award or ASTRO's 49th Annual Meeting, please visit www.astro.org. For more information on radiation therapy, please visit www.rtanswers.org.


Interested in Medical Industry News? Subscribe to DOTmed's weekly news email and always be informed. Click here, it takes just 30 seconds.

Please Send us your Comments.

Printable Story
Access and use of this site is subject to the terms and conditions of our LEGAL NOTICE & PRIVACY NOTICE
Property of and Proprietary to DOTmed.com, Inc. Copyright ©2001-2009 DOTmed.com, Inc.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED