The Chicago Cancer Health Equity Collaborative () has announced the details of its . This year鈥檚 theme is Addressing Cancer Together During COVID-19: The ChicagoCHEC Partnership.
The forum will take place virtually from 11 a.m-1 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 17, and Friday, Sept. 18, via Zoom. There will be various presentations on both days, and information will be provided in English, Spanish and American Sign Language (ASL). This event is free and open to the public.
ChicagoCHEC is a National Cancer Institute comprehensive cancer partnership led by the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, 天天吃瓜, and the University of Illinois at Chicago. ChicagoCHEC鈥檚 mission is to advance cancer health equity through meaningful scientific discovery, education, training and community engagement.
鈥淭ime goes fast, and five years ago when I attended the initial announcement of the NIH funding for the collaboration of Chicago institutions to focus on cancer equity, as a clinician and a respected community advocate, this presented an opportunity to serve, watch, participate and keep our leaders, researchers and academia in check,鈥 said Joanne Glenn, ChicagoCHEC Community Steering Committee (CSC) co-chair and founder of the W.O.T. Foundation, Inc. 鈥淚t was an opportunity, as the late great John Lewis stated, for 鈥榞ood trouble,鈥 meaning, if the community was not at the table, it would be concerning. To fast forward, job well done, CHEC.鈥
The COVID-19 pandemic has added another layer of challenges to fighting cancer, CSC co-chair Henrietta Barcelo said.
鈥淐ancer doesn鈥檛 stop during COVID-19,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t keeps hiding, attacking, growing in our bodies. We have to keep up on cancer health for our mothers, fathers, children, t铆as, t铆os y abuelos and arm ourselves with information and resources that speak our languages and help us fight cancer when it strikes.鈥
Interested participants in ChicagoCHEC鈥檚 community forum may .
鈥淪ince its inception I have found the Community Forum has been a valuable tool for educating diverse populations that may not have been served before,鈥 said Rosemarie Rogers, CSC member for ChicagoCHEC. 鈥淚t has provided culturally appropriate materials and given the attendees the opportunity to communicate and interact in a safe environment.鈥
Carmen Velasquez, CSC member and founder of Alivio Medical Center, calls ChicagoCHEC鈥檚 forum 鈥渋ncredible鈥 for 鈥渙n-the-ground鈥 sharing among those who have or had cancer and those who have been touched by cancer through their families and extended families.
鈥淐OVID-19 has ravaged our communities and has worsened all types of health inequities, but especially those in cancer,鈥 said Melissa Simon, M.D., George H. Gardner Professor of Clinical Gynecology of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and Principal Investigator of ChicagoCHEC. 鈥淭his year our annual Community Forum is going to tackle the intersection of inequities, cancer and COVID-19 in the hopes that we can help lift the needs of our communities and find on-the-ground solutions to respond.鈥
Since 2015, ChicagoCHEC鈥檚 mission has been to advance cancer health equity through meaningful scientific discovery, education, training and community engagement. This year鈥檚 community forum also celebrates five years of advancing cancer health equity.
鈥淭he cancer health disparities we see in Chicago stand as a clear call to action,鈥 said Marian Fitzgibbon, Principal Investigator on the ChicagoCHEC grant and Associate Director of Cancer Prevention and Control at the University of Illinois Cancer Center. 鈥淥nly by working together and through authentic engagement can we create meaningful change and reduce the unequal share of the cancer burden experienced by our underserved communities.鈥
鈥淐hicagoCHEC has made great strides in reducing cancer health inequities by creating new educational and research opportunities for students from across the City of Chicago,鈥 said Christina Ciecierski, Principal Investigator of ChicagoCHEC and Professor of Economics at 天天吃瓜.
鈥淥nly through partnership and engagement with our city鈥檚 underserved can we foster meaningful cancer research, education and training that appropriately addresses health equity issues,鈥 said Lidia Filus, Principal Investigator of ChicagoCHEC and Professor and Chair of Mathematics of 天天吃瓜 (NEIU). 鈥淏y serving the most diverse populations of students, NEIU is well-positioned to reach out to these communities and encourage them to actively participate and engage in this partnership.鈥
鈥淭he work of Chicago CHEC embodies Angela Davis鈥 famous quote: 鈥業 no longer accept the things I can鈥檛 change and am changing the things I can鈥檛 accept,鈥欌 said Joseph Feinglass, Principal Investigator of ChicagoCHEC and Research Professor of Medicine at Northwestern University.