GOING THE DISTANCE:
"FOR LIFE"
Cancer is the second leading cause of death on the Navajo Nation and the death rate continues to rise.
The absence of local cancer treatment centers often causes our patients to be diagnosed until they are in advanced and incurable stages.
Cancer patients living on the Navajo Nation face multiple challenges in receiving cancer treatment that they critically need. The nearest cancer treatment center is over 80 miles away (one way), there may be no interpreters that speak our native language at those facilities, and the financial burden of care and travel is great. Some patients must travel the same distance as Washington, DC to New York City just for one day of cancer treatment. In addition, most patients live in communities where unemployment rates are over 40% and household incomes are below the national poverty level.
Eventually, some patients decide to forego cancer treatment completely as these barriers feel impossible.
WHY ONCOLOGY?
The Navajo Nation has a patient population of 173,000.
Data shows:
Phoenix has 1 oncologist per 16,512 people
Flagstaff has 1 oncologist per 13,373 people
Navajo Nation has 1 oncologist per 173,000 people
TCRHCC and its partners knew this had to change!
Now There’s Hope on the Navajo Nation
Tuba City, AZ – …the Navajo Nation marked a milestone moment: the opening of the first full-time cancer care center on an American Indian reservation. The culturally adapted cancer care center at TCRHCC will provide oncology services to the Navajo, Hopi, and San Juan Southern Paiutes.
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