Wednesday, December 9, 2009

As you can see by the change in the look of our blog, we've been experiencing a few changes here in our little corner of the world. Helping Oncology Patients Excel has merged with North Arkansas Radiation Therapy Institute and has now become Hope Cancer Resources. We will continue to offer all of the free programs that were previously managed by the individual agencies, including:
  • Cancer Screenings
  • Prevention Education
  • Interpretation Services
  • Emotional Support
  • Financial Support
  • Support Groups
  • Clinical Trial Access
  • Educational Materials & Speakers
  • Transportation Services

The effect this merger will have on our patients, and on the general health and well-being of our friends and neighbors in NW Arkansas, is tremendous. As one agency, we will no longer compete for funding from local grant-making organizations. We will be able to blend our overlapping services and serve a growing number of cancer patients and their caregivers with increased and more focused resources. We are now located in a larger and more centrally-located building. Programs we have had on our "someday" list will now be able to be made a reality. Can you see why we're excited??

A new website is currently in the works, and should be live sometime around the first of the new year. Until then, keep in touch with what's going on here on our blog. It's the season to be thankful, and we at Hope Cancer Resources have a great deal of good things to remember as we contemplate where we are, and where we're headed... and we couldn't do all the good work we do without your help.

Thank YOU, Northwest Arkansas!!

Monday, July 27, 2009

Happening for HOPE at Gullett's Gourmet!

We want to say THANK YOU to all the great people who came out to Gullett's Gourmet in Fayetteville last week to support HOPE!!

Attendees enjoyed a breezy (and only a tiny bit humid) evening on the patio, and the musical stylings of Scott Miller on guitar. His son, Jackson, added some interpretive dance for good measure, but wasn't able to entice anyone to join him.

Mark your calendars now for our next Happening at Eddie Haskell's in Rogers August 27th ~ See you there!
(In case you need more enticement, check out all these happy faces from last week!!)






Thursday, July 23, 2009

Happening for HOPE!

What are you doing tonight?

There are a lot of things going on... ballgames, free concerts in parks... but there's also an opportunity for you to have some great food, listen to some good music, AND support HOPE, Inc. and cancer patients in Northwest Arkansas!

Tonight at Gullett's Gourmet in Fayetteville we are thrilled to be hosted for a Happening for HOPE. Scott Miller will be playing some great music for us, Grant Gullett has promised some food specials, and a percentage of the evening's sales will be donated to HOPE to support our patient assistance and clinical trials research programs.

Last year, we were able to assist 1,641 local cancer patients with financial assistance, counseling for them and/or their loved ones, and assist with prescription medication expenses. There is no other agency in Northwest Arkansas that does everything we do.

Help us help others - and remember, when it comes to cancer's effect on the people we love, there is no "them"... only "us".

Monday, June 29, 2009

Oncology Social Workers - healing and giving HOPE

Most of us would assume that the words "You have Cancer." delivered by a medical professional would make us afraid for our health. Physical limitations might follow, which would be fairly easy to predict. Fear of death is a given, and we would probably think of our family, and the burden that we might become on them while we are ill.

But even though you expect the physical and emotional results of the diagnosis, you may not know the stress that dealing with a diagnosis and the resulting treatment brings, can have a very real impact on the ability a patient has to heal, recover, and survive. In fact, patients who receive phycho-social support in the form of counseling and support group activities have a higher rate of survival than those who do not. For that reason, cancer centers all over the U.S. are starting to add a social work component to their treatment plans.

HOPE, Inc. employs three licensed social workers in order to provide assistance to cancer patients in northwest Arkansas. Starting with the initial visit a patient makes to Highland's Oncology Clinic in Fayetteville, a social worker is assigned to assess their needs for financial and emotional assistance, and to keep in touch with that patient to continue access to our services as they make the frightening and sometimes confusing journey through cancer treatment.

Even if a cancer patient is not being treated at the Fayetteville Highland's, they can still receive emotional and financial support from HOPE if they live in Washington, Benton, Carroll or Madison counties. For more information on our services please contact us at 479-571-4673 or visit our website at http://www.hopenwa.org/.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Summer Events for HOPE!

Get out your calendar! We have a great selection of events scheduled this summer to help HOPE get the word out about our programs and services, and to raise a little money to provide the support that is so desperately needed for local cancer patients in northwest Arkansas.

Check these out:

What: Homemade for HOPE
When: June 26, 2009 7am – 4:30pm
Where: Highland’s Oncology Group
3232 Northhills Drive, Fayetteville, 72703
Homemade baked goods for sale to benefit the patient assistance and clinical trials programs at HOPE, Inc. (Helping Oncology Patients Excel)
Need more information, or wish to donate? Call HOPE, Inc. at 479-571-4673


What: Happening for HOPE
When: July 23, 2009 5:30pm – 9:30pm
Where: Gullett’s Gourmet
326 N. West Avenue, Fayetteville, 72703
Live music, food specials, and great atmosphere – 10% of sales for the evening to benefit the patient assistance and clinical trials programs at HOPE, Inc. (Helping Oncology Patients Excel) Need more information? Call HOPE, Inc. at 479-571-4673


What: Hardbacks for HOPE (and Paperbacks too!)
When: July 24, 2009 7am – 4:30pm
Where: Highland’s Oncology Group
3232 Northhills Drive, Fayetteville, 72703
Pre-owned and gently used books for sale to benefit the patient assistance and clinical trials programs at HOPE, Inc. (Helping Oncology Patients Excel)
Need more information, or wish to donate? Call HOPE, Inc. at 479-571-4673


What: Rummage Sale for HOPE
When: August 7-8, 2009 8am – 4:30pm
Where: Highland’s Oncology Group
3232 Northhills Drive, Fayetteville, 72703
Tons of great items! Furniture, kitchen items, clothing, toys… all sales benefit the patient assistance and clinical trials programs at HOPE, Inc. (Helping Oncology Patients Excel) Need more information, or wish to donate? Call HOPE, Inc. at 479-571-4673


What: Happening for HOPE
When: August 27, 2009 6pm – 9pm
Where: Eddie Haskell’s
3300 Market Street, Suite 100, Rogers, AR 72758
Bring your friends and family out to enjoy a bite and a sip and help local cancer patients at the same time. 10% of sales will be donated to HOPE, Inc. for this Thursday night event at Eddie Haskell’s. Need more information? Call HOPE, Inc. at 479-571-4673.


As you can see, there is something planned for EVERYONE. We hope to see you there, and there, and there, and there... well, you get the idea.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Economic Impact (Part Two)

Raise your hand if you've heard the term "clinical trials". Okay, now keep your hand up if you aren't really sure what they are or what the purpose of them is. There are a lot of hands still in the air!

There is a lot of talk in journals and on websites that keep up with cancer research that mentions clinical trials. When a patient is starting to head down the road of treatment, it's one of the options that could be presented by their oncologist... but what does it mean to join a trial? Where are they located? And, most important for some patients - how much will it cost?

Clinical trials are available for virtually every type or stage of cancer diagnosis. To be accepted into a trial means that there is active research being conducted on your specific cancer type, stage of development, or treatment plan. Sometimes they are set up to test a new combination of medications, and other times they are more unique, like the one currently being conducted at UAMS where women's tears are being captured and tested for proteins that may point to the development of breast cancer.

Many patients see trials as a "last resort" option, only to be looked into when traditional treatments don't provide the desired recovery results. But more and more cancer clinics are putting together staff who can do the research and management that is necessary to develop and manage top-notch clinical trials program on a local level, providing access from the very beginning of a treatment plan.

At HOPE, Inc. we have a licensed RN on staff who manages twelve clinical trials for the patients referred to us by oncologists at Highland's Oncology Group in Fayetteville and Bentonville. Since these trials are managed and performed here in NW Arkansas, our patients are able to benefit from cutting-edge research and still sleep in their own beds at night.

Not having to travel to a distant medical facility like MD Anderson in Houston or the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota is not only emotionally beneficial for our patients, but it takes a potentially HUGE burden off of their budget. Recently, we calculated the estimated cost of participating in a clinical trial at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock, Arkansas and came up with the following:

Mileage Expenses: $.585 (IRS rate) x 400 miles = $234 x min. of 25 trips = $5,850

Lodging/Meals for a three day stay: $136 (IRS Per Diem Rate) x 75 (3 days per trip) = $10,200

3 days lost wages (24 total hours) = 431.76 x 25 trips = $10,794
(based on average household median income for Arkansas: $37,420 = $17.99 per hour)

Total Annual Expense Per Patient: $26,844

Remember, this is only calculating the costs for a trial conducted three hours away, and doesn't even include the cost to a caregiver for their time off work, food, and lodging on the trip. Then there are the regular medications and treatments and doctors' visits required to maintain the standard of care...

Now you can see what one of our patients meant when she recently told us that her first thought upon receiving her diagnosis of colon cancer was "I can't afford to have cancer."


Help us provide hope for people in Northwest Arkansas living with cancer.
Donate today.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Economic Impact (Part One)

There was an article published in the Northwest Arkansas Times in January of this year that explored the impact of local non-profit organizations on our community's financial outlook. The article focused primarily on how the highlighted agencies contribute to the area's financial stability through payment of salaries and bringing ancillary monies to the community.

HOPE, Inc. doesn't employ dozens of people, nor does it host programs that will attract hundreds of spectators who will feed their families at local restaurants, but as an organization that provides direct financial assistance, we can state without a doubt that our fiscal viability is vital to our community especially in the midst of our country's current economic downturn. Just as we are working harder to secure donations at levels equal to those of past years, the cancer patients we serve need us more than ever before.

Last year we created a report that outlined the amount of value our assistance programs offer to our community, and the numbers were impressive. We found that for fiscal year 2007-2008, the monthly financial impact our programs had on cancer patients living or being treated in northwest Arkansas was $39,720.00.

The total financial impact for the entire fiscal year was $476,640.00.

That is money spent to keep people in their homes, make sure they are able to get to their radiation appointments to maintain the treatment plan set up by their physician, and to help them focus on healing and recovery rather than whether or not they can afford to buy their chemotherapy prescription AND put food on the table for their family.

Travel expenses for those needing treatment out of town are also provided on a case-by-case basis. Notes from patients like this are what it's all about for us:

I want to take this opportunity to express our deepest gratitude for your organization's financial assistance for our son. Your donation of $600 helped us afford to live in an apartment near CARTI in Little Rock. The apartment has been a infinite blessing in the midst of such a painful time for our son. The radiation and chemo treatments that he receives each weekday are very hard on his body. It is comforting to come "home" to our apartment each day and relax in a quiet and peaceful setting. May God richly bless your individual and corporate lives.

You can make a difference in the life of a local cancer patient. Find out more about HOPE, Inc. and donate online at www.hopenwa.org. We are all affected, and we can all share HOPE.

Next time: The cost benefit of providing LOCAL clinical trials to cancer patients.