‘Hear My Voice’ Goes to Washington
Living Beyond Breast Cancer’s Hear My Voice Outreach Volunteer Program provides the tools and training to help people living with metastatic breast cancer make a difference in their physical and digital communities. Hear My Voice volunteer William “Kirby” Lewis, 57, from Inwood, West Virginia, was diagnosed with stage II breast cancer in 2012 and stage IV breast cancer in 2016.
From June 25-27 he was in Washington D.C. to learn about political advocacy and to talk to his elected representatives about keeping health care affordable and accessible for people like him. Here, he talks about his experience on Capitol Hill.
This article, with the headline Kirby Lewis: My NCCS CPAT Symposium and Hill Day Experience, was originally published by the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship and is republished here with permission.
Through my association with Living Beyond Breast Cancer, I was invited to attend a workshop Symposium with the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship. The CPAT Symposium was held just steps away from Capitol Hill at the Washington Court Hotel. It was a great, incredibly informative, and intensive 2-day training session.
Our members hailed from all over the country, with all types of cancer. In total, approximately 65 people prepared for our goal: to meet with our individual Congressional Representatives from our respective states with the purpose to STOP the proposed new health care bill, the Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA). The reasons varied for each participant, but the major issues voiced were the BCRA’s elimination or decreased coverage of Medicaid, compounded by the aspect that it would not adequately protect against pre-existing conditions—two factors that affect many of us with cancer.

I left the Capitol, tired, relieved, and once again feeling blessed that somehow something I said during these meetings might resonate and make a difference. It is good to do advocacy work…and it is great to be part of the process that makes America the best country in the world.
Living Beyond Breast Cancer believes the Better Care Reconciliation Act is a bad deal for people with cancer. To see all of our ongoing coverage of healthcare reform, visit our Healthcare Newsroom.
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