We are proud to partner with the Chrysalis Initiative, For the Breast of Us, My Style Matters, Tigerlily Foundation, and Touch, the Black Breast Cancer Alliance to host the annual webinar series Knowledge is power: The Black breast cancer experience.
This three-part series features discussions about disparities in breast cancer care, how to get the care you deserve, and strategies for living well beyond your diagnosis.
Speakers include leaders from our partner organizations, researchers, medical and wellness experts, as well as Black women diagnosed with breast cancer.
Want to host a Knowledge is power watch party? LBBC is offering a limited number of watch party grants to Black-led/Black-founded non-profit organizations and community groups to host watch parties for the 2023 Knowledge is power webinar series. Grants are $500 and will be offered on a first-come, first-served basis. Learn more. Applications are now closed.
Please email programs@lbbc.org by Tuesday, September 5 to request ASL interpretation.
On this page
Program partners
Part 1
Thursday, September 14 | 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. (EST)
Watch the video recording below.
Session 1 | All the feels: Supporting the mental health of Black women with breast cancer
Program partner: Living Beyond Breast Cancer
Moderator: Atiba Page
Speaker: Lisa Nelson, LMSW, OSW-C
Sometimes it’s the scars we don’t see that impact people the most. Join us as we discuss the prevalent needs in mental health for Black women impacted by breast cancer. During this session, we will unpack how to best support mental and emotional well-being, address existing barriers, and offer practical advice and resources. This session will equip you with tools to best support yourself and others.
Session 2 | Purifying Black beauty: Reducing exposures to toxins in personal care products
Program partner: My Style Matters
Moderator: Tiah Tomlin-Harris, MS
Speakers: Dede K. Teteh, DrPH, MPH, CHES and Jazma Tapia, PhD
Join us for an empowering presentation on reclaiming our beauty and reducing exposures to toxins from our personal care products. Learn about the harmful effects of toxins commonly found in our products like parabens, phthalates, and synthetic fragrances. Explore the impact of these toxins on our health and how we can demand legislative change. Get practical tips and guidance on making informed choices for safer products because we deserve products that nourish and celebrate our natural Black beauty.
Part 2
Thursday, September 21 | 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. (EST)
Session 1 | Empowering patient advocates to remove barriers to care in their community
Program partner: Tigerlily Foundation
Moderator: Maimah Karmo
Panelists: Ogori N. Kalu, MD, MS; Lashelle D. Scott, MPM; and Camille A. Lewis
If we want to see change, we must be the change we hope to see in the world. Join our interactive panel of patient advocates and physicians as we share tangible tools for creating change in our communities. Learn to be a force multiplier in your community by sharing adding your voice to the health equity movement.
Session 2 | When we tri(al) we save lives!
Program Partner: Touch the Black Breast Cancer Alliance
Moderator: Ricki Fairley
Panelists: LaToya Bolds-Johnson, PA-C; Monique Gary, DO, MSc, FACS; Sara Horton, MD; Sheila Marie Johnson; Melanie A. Nix; and Gregory Vidal, MD, PhD
Clinical trials are research studies in which people volunteer to try new therapies and interventions (under careful supervision) in order to help doctors identify the best treatment plans with the fewest side effects. These studies help improve the overall standard of care (the treatment regimen that most physicians and experts widely agree is the most effective and appropriate for a specific subtype and stage of breast cancer). Clinical trials are an important step in discovering new treatments for breast cancer and other diseases as well as new ways to detect, diagnose, and reduce the risk of disease.
Black women are largely excluded from trials that study breast cancer drugs and treatments. With low participation rates in clinical trials, Black women miss access to newly emerging and often life-extending treatments not otherwise available. But more than that, clinical trials are used to answer major questions: Does the new treatment or procedure work? Is what's being tested better than what's being used now? Does it cause more or fewer side effects?
The majority of breast cancer clinical trial participants are white women, which means that these fundamental questions aren’t being answered for Black women’s bodies. Black women also experience many cancer drug side effects differently, so what other aspects of treatment are not the same for Black breast cancer patients?
Trial data, resulting treatment protocols, and product development don’t account for the many factors of Black Breast Cancer. We will not be able to change the devastating Black Breast Cancer mortality numbers unless we understand the physiology of Black women. We cannot do that until we have more Black women participating in clinical research.
Learn from this panel of doctors, researchers and patients as they share their experiences and how clinical trial participation is saving the lives of Black Breasties.
Part 3
Thursday, September 28 | 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. (EST)
Session 1 | Inequality you can't ignore
Program partner: The Chrysalis Initiative
Moderator: Arnethea Sutton, PhD
Panelists: Roberta "Bobbi" Albany, Kimmie Ducksworth, and Jamil Rivers
The Chrysalis Initiative was established in 2019 to address breast cancer disparities and breast health inequities using patient activation (or empowerment), provider education, and barrier intervention to reduce the impact of disparities in breast cancer outcomes. The Chrysalis Initiative addresses the individual and institutional knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors that impact health outcomes for Black women (and other disparate groups) with breast cancer.
How unequal is breast cancer care for Black women?
Studies show that breast cancer treatment outcomes for Black women compared to White women are not equal, resulting in a 42% higher mortality rate for Black women. But little has been done to change this reality.
This session will discuss how TCI and LBBC make medical communities aware of these disparities and help open their eyes to any blind spots and procedural issues that could be unknowingly perpetuating the problem.
The Chrysalis Initiative is based on a four-part strategy to reduce disparities in breast cancer
care, improve equity, and result in systemic change:
- Education of breast cancer risks if gone undiagnosed.
- Providing support and barrier intervention for breast cancer patients.
- Offering education and intervention for providers with breast cancer patients.
- Developing engaging opportunities rooted in equity, encouraging BIPOC students to
pursue careers in healthcare.
The work categories of The Chrysalis Initiative are:
- Patient coaching, navigation, and education
- Provider training
- Equity assessments and workshops
- Student pipeline programs
- Speaking engagements
- Advocacy training
- Virtual learning management modules
- Online content, courses, and guides
Session 2 | "I got you sis"
Program partner: For the Breast of Us
Moderator: April Finley
Panelists: Vatesha Bouler; Latoya Cauley; Tandria Edwards, and Chalice C. Rhodes, PhD
Survivorship can be about picking up where you left off or pause.... reset...restart.... either way, I got you sis! Navigating survivorship from diagnosis and beyond as a Black Woman.
Speakers


Roberta "Bobbi" Albany
Founder & CEO, Cancer in the Know


Latoya Bolds-Johnson PA-C
Board-Certified Physician Assistant


Vatesha Bouler
Patient Advocate


Latoya Cauley
Patient Advocate


Kimmie Ducksworth
Patient Advocate


Tandria Edwards
Patient Advocate


Ricki Fairley
CEO, TOUCH, The Black Breast Cancer Alliance


April Finley
Patient Advocate, South Carolina


Monique Gary DO, MSc, FACS
Medical Director, Grand View Health/Penn Cancer Network Cancer Program


Sara Horton MD
Executive Director of Access and Diversity, Quantum Leap Healthcare


Sheila Marie Johnson MBA
Patient Advocate


Ogori N. Kalu MD, MS
Breast surgical oncologist


Maimah Karmo
CEO, Tigerlily Foundation


Camille A. Lewis
Patient Advocate


Melanie A. Nix
Patient Advocate


Lisa Petgrave-Nelson LMSW, OSW-C
Oncology Social Worker; End-of-Life Doula


Chalice C. Rhodes PhD
Licensed Professional Counselor, National Certified Counselor, Board Certified TeleMentalHealth Counselor, Psychosocial Cancer/Oncology Behavioral Health Specialist


Jamil Rivers
CEO and Founder, The Chrysalis Initiative


Lashelle D. Scott MPM
Patient Advocate


Arnethea Sutton PhD
Assistant Professor, Department of Kinesiology & Health Sciences, Virginia Commonwealth University


Jazma Leona Tapia PhD
Postdoctoral Fellow, Division of Health Equities, City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center


Dede K. Teteh DrPH, MPH, CHES
Assistant Professor of Public Health, Department of Health Sciences, Chapman University


Marissa Thomas BSHCA
Co-founder, For the Breast of Us; Project Coordinator, Extrahop


Tiah Tomlin-Harris MS
Co-founder, My Style Matters, Inc


Gregory Vidal MD, PhD
Director of Clinical Research, West Cancer Center & Research Institute
Sponsors
Title
Benefactor
Friend
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Penn Medicine's Abramson Cancer Center
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Penn Medicine’s Basser Center for BRCA
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Relay Therapeutics
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Univest Financial