Lung Cancer Advocate Boldly Demands Washington Take Action

Summer FarmenPictured here, left to right with son Harrison, husband Jeff, Summer and daughter Lucy. Front row is son Jackson (Submitted Image)

PENNSYLVANIA — Hershey resident and lung cancer advocate, Summer Farmen, will travel to Washington, D.C. tomorrow (March 29) to meet with her members of Congress during the American Lung Association’s LUNG FORCE Advocacy Day. As a part of the nationwide event, [Farmen] will join more than 40 other people across the country who have been impacted by lung cancer to ask lawmakers to support $51 billion in research funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH), $11.6B in funding for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and to support and protect Medicaid.

“I had experiences from my own childhood that prepared me to navigate medical advocacy. My father spent his career working for a pharmaceutical company as a Medical Science Liaison, collaborating with oncology teams to facilitate investigative studies and clinical trial development. We talked about cancer at the dinner table like a mechanic’s family would talk about cars. Our family was well versed in cancer lingo and our vocabulary included words like benign, malignant, metastatic, and remission. All the while we were shown what words like perseverance, dedication and determination looked like in real life. My father was in a heart-breaking industry, but he was full of hope.

When my pandemic cough continued to worsen, I never suspected it would be lung cancer. I had no risk factors, had been teaching fitness classes since college and instilled a healthy lifestyle in my children. It all came to a head in June 2020 when I had a CT scan and was immediately sent to the emergency room. One of my lungs was crushed by pleural fluid. Once the fluid was removed, both lungs and the surrounding lymph nodes displayed a portrait splattered with tumors. I caught the pulmonologist off guard as I asked for benign reasons for this and questioned malignancy and metastasis. I never suspected conversations about cancer from my youth would apply to me.”

READ:  Biden Administration Finalizes Controversial Nursing Home Staffing Rule, Sparks Concern Among Providers

Said Summer on attending Advocacy Day, “It is a true honor to participate in LUNG FORCE Advocacy Day with the American Lung Association and to be a part of bringing critical patient needs to the forefront.”

During Advocacy Day, Summer Farmen will speak with Senators Casey and Fetterman and Representative Perry (or their staff) to share her personal experience with lung cancer and explain why investments in public health, research funding and quality and affordable healthcare are important to her.

The American Lung Association launched LUNG FORCE Advocacy Day in 2016 to ask members of Congress to support robust, sustainable and predictable federal funding increases for lung cancer research, prevention and quality and affordable healthcare. As a part of Advocacy Day, LUNG FORCE Heroes have succeeded in helping increase NIH lung cancer research funding by over 115%. Since 2016, more than 50 new therapies have been approved by the FDA to treat lung cancer—giving more hope to those impacted by this disease. In 2022, Heroes successfully urged Congress to extend funding for tax credits so more than three million Americans were able to keep affordable healthcare coverage through the federal and state marketplaces.

Summer is encouraging others in Pennsylvania to advocate for lung cancer research and healthcare protections by contacting their members of Congress, which they can do at Lung.org/AdvocacyDay. Learn more about Summer’s story and the LUNG FORCE initiative at LUNGFORCE.org.

For the latest news on everything happening in Chester County and the surrounding area, be sure to follow MyChesCo on Google News and Microsoft Start.