The American Cancer Society says about 13,800 new cases of invasive cervical cancer will be diagnosed this year. About 4,290 women will die from cervical cancer. Cervical cancer is most frequently diagnosed in women between the ages of 35 and 44 with the average age at diagnosis being 50. The cervical cancer death rate dropped significantly with the increased use of routine pap tests.
Read MoreWe have several team members who celebrated their employment anniversary this year. Join us in thanking them for their years of service and dedication to our patients.
Read MoreOCTOBER 2020: Julio Davila is just starting to get comfortable with who he sees in the mirror again. While he still has “chemo brain,” a ringing in his ears, a numb tingly feeling in his arm and hand, and tires easily as after effects to his cancer treatment, he is just about back to his normal weight and his hair has grown back – he just doesn’t have as much.
Read MoreMeasuring our work is important because we are constantly striving to improve. Despite challenges due to the coronavirus pandemic, we are excited to share the resilience, adaptability, and many successes at the June E. Nylen Cancer Center this past fiscal year through our Annual Report.
Read MoreDetectnet™ is a radioactive diagnostic agent used with positron emission tomography (PET) imaging specifically used for detecting, staging, and restaging somatostatin receptor positive neuroendocrine tumors. Detectnet replaces the octreotide scan with better imaging and quicker scan times. It is a newer diagnostic test and not every cancer center can do these scans, but it is now available the June E. Nylen Cancer Center.
Read MoreOCTOBER 2020: Imagine living 70 years of relatively good health and then one day learning you have a blood disorder that left untreated would be fatal. That is what happened to Sioux City native Daniel Parker in August 2020.
Read MoreSEPTEMBER 2020: Mary Lou Fennell was looking forward to the next chapter of her life when she retired in April 2020. She enjoyed her new-found freedom right after retiring by spending two weeks with one of her daughters and her family. The day she was to return to her own home in Sioux City, she had a sharp pain in her abdomen. By the next morning the pain was so unbearable, she went to the emergency department.
Read MoreJULY 2020: Akossiwa Anani-Mekle came to Sioux City from her home country Togo, Africa in 2019 for work. Her 18-year-old daughter lives with her in Sioux City but the rest of her family still resides in Africa. Akossiwa was diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer after she woke up one day and her right breast was itchy. She showed her daughter, who had just learned about breast cancer in school and she said they needed to go to the hospital right away.
Read MoreThe June E. Nylen Cancer Center was one of the beneficiary organizations that received a significant gift from Ruth and Tom Schuldt. Designated to our Patient Assistance Program, their estate gift will help break down barriers to patients receiving their cancer treatment.
Read MoreAPRIL 2020: Attacking challenges head on is nothing new to 51-year old Delaine Krager of Paullina, Iowa. Delaine had been managing having Graves’ disease as well as a blood disorder for years and controlling aspects of her life that could impact these health factors. Delaine found a lump in her left breast but watched it for a while as lumps throughout her body was a symptom of her Graves’ disease. “But this one kept growing and didn’t seem right,” she said.
Read MoreNOVEMBER 2019: Francis, “Fran,” Palmersheim has been fortunate to do a lot in his life. “I’ve used my knowledge and abilities to help people,” says the 74-year old Sioux City man who started two local businesses and until recently, served on the Sioux City Parks and Recreational Board. “This keeps me sharp and I’ve gotten to know a lot of people.” Fran has not let pancreatic cancer stop him.
Read MoreNOVEMBER 2019: This Thanksgiving Lynette Kron is extra grateful. The 58-year old from Fonda, Iowa just finished her last chemotherapy treatment. While she rang the bell in the June E. Nylen Cancer Center (JENCC) lobby, she and husband of 33 years, Michael, say they are really going to celebrate this New Year’s Eve. They are going to applaud this year coming to an end and it being another new year – a cancer free year.
Read MoreNOVEMBER 2019: Rita DeJong, now age 66, has always been good about getting her annual health checks, including being diligent with her yearly routine mammogram screening for more than 15 years. So, it was a surprise when she received a call the afternoon after her last mammogram telling her based on the results, they need to check out more. Rita had a breast biopsy and was told it “was worrisome.” In December 2018 Rita was diagnosed with Triple Positive Breast Ductal Cancer.
Read MoreThank you to the supporters of the Siouxland Big Give that helped us fund the purchase of an infrared vein finder that both our staff and patients think makes a significant difference when starting IVs. This piece of equipment helps our clinicians find and access the best veins and provides vein mapping without any radiation.
Read MoreUntil recently, Selective Internal Radiation Therapy (SIRT) was not a local option for cancer patients. SIRT, a type of internal radiotherapy also known as radioembolization, is primarily used to treat inoperable primary or metastatic liver tumors but there is a lot of research happening to determine how additionally can be used. The June E. Nylen Cancer Center (JENCC) oncologists now work closely with Dr. Neal Khurana, an interventional radiologist, who performs SIRT in Siouxland.
Read MoreWe have Cancer Center apparel available online now through November 16. Check out what is available!
Read MoreLung Cancer is the leading cancer is Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota according to the American Cancer Society. Learn more about the risk factors and importance of early detection.
Read MoreNovember is an awareness month for several cancers, including stomach cancer. Learn more about this type of cancer, its risk factors, symptoms, and treatment.
Read MoreThe average lifetime risk of pancreatic cancer is about 1 in 64. Pancreatic cancer accounts for about 3% of all cancers in the US and about 7% of all cancer deaths. It is slightly more common in men than in women.
Read MoreCarcinoid tumors are slow-growing cancer that can arise in several places throughout the body, but usually begin in the digestive organs (stomach, appendix, small intestine, color, rectum) or in the lungs. Learn more…
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