Program Summary: Stewart Lyman, “If You Could Vaccinate Your Kids To Prevent Them From Getting Cancer, Would You Do It?”

Paul Weibel, Scribe

Our program on October 15, 2020 featured Dr. Stewart Lyman, Oncologist and HPV vaccine advocate.

Dr. Lyman is an independent consultant to the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industry. He has thirty-one years of experience in biotechnology and drug development. His clients have included small biotech start-ups with a one-time project need as well as big multi-national pharmaceutical companies that require ongoing services. He also works with venture capital firms and financial institutions to evaluate new technologies and review scientific data.

At Immunex, Dr. Lyman was Director, Extramural Research. He headed a group that ran one of the largest research collaboration programs in the world. The group oversaw some 2,500 collaborations during that time and sent over 1,000 unique reagents to over 1,000 different research institutions worldwide.

He was diagnosed with HPV-attributed tonsil cancer in 2016.

There are 170 strains of Human papillomavirus (HPV), 6 of which can cause cancer.  It is the most common form of sexually transmitted disease. Chances of a woman having HPV by the time she is 45 years-old is between 80% and 90%.  The most common form of HPV caused cancer in woman is cervical cancer and for men it is oral cancer.  

The HPV vaccine was introduced in 2006.  Recommended by age 11.  Since then there has been a large decrease in infections.  No single exam can detect HPV and there are no antibodies.  The immune system can eliminate the virus.  Odds are about 1% +/- that HPV will result in cancer.  The HPV vaccine will prevent 6 types of cancer.  More information can be found at hpvcancerresources.org.  

Program Summary: Lindsey Karas, Mercy Housing, & Tamara Brown, Solid Ground, October 8, 2020

On October 8, 2020, our program featured presentations from Mercy Housing and Solid Ground. These are two organizations with which our club works to be a positive force in dealing with homelessness, especially with people of color. Our efforts with them focus on the programs located in the Sand Point area of Seattle.

Solid Ground believes that housing and family stability are foundational to ending poverty. They help families keep or obtain housing and get support to overcome poverty & thrive. Solid Ground works to end poverty and undo racism and other oppressions that are root causes of poverty. Solid Ground envisions a community beyond poverty and oppression where all people have equitable opportunity to thrive.

Mercy Housing handles every aspect of the affordable housing process, from project financing and housing development to community outreach and long-term resident services. We provide a custom approach to affordable housing which allows us to help more people and more communities while ensuring that each project is completed to our high standards. As one of the largest, most experienced affordable housing providers in the country, we are proud to offer a model of full-spectrum support for individuals and communities, including:

Tamara Brown of Solid Ground has been working to end homelessness in our community for the last 30 years. She has seen it grow, she says, as the result of income inequality increased, wage growth stalled, affordable housing decreased, and the wholesale ignoring of mental health and addiction needs in our community.  For fifteen years, at Catholic Community services in South King County, she worked as a program manager for several housing programs, eventually as Family Center Director. She worked inside the King County Regional Justice Center for five years with homeless men and women as they transitioned back into the community after incarceration.  She served as Chair of SKCCH for over 3 years.   In 2005, she took a position as a Program Manager at Solid Ground, and during the last 15 years, she has worked in various capacities throughout the agency, including the development and management of housing at Magnuson Park and oversight of various programs.  Currently, she is one of the managers on the campus, working primarily with our single homeless populations.

Lindsey Karas is the Resident Services Managers for Mercy Housing Northwest since March 2020. She currently oversees Resident Services programs at Mercy Magnuson Place and other Mercy Housing properties in Snohomish and Whatcom counties. Before becoming a manager, Lindsey worked at another Mercy Housing property in Bellingham since 2008. She is bilingual in Spanish and is dedicated to helping low-income families improve their economic well-being and ensure academic success for their children. She is a past recipient of the Ken Gass Community Building Award from the Whatcom Family and Community Network and the Community Champions award from Molina Healthcare of Washington. She also won the Peace Builder Award for her work with the residents at Sterling Meadows Apartments in 2017.

Mercy Housing is largest nonprofit affordable housing in country. It provides housing for seniors families and people with special needs. There is staff at the facility on site to help with issues. 342 people are served. There are many students in public schools that are low or very low income resident.

There have been issues with rent and financial stability during COVID, as well as issues with remote learning. The staff helps with remote learning support. Staff are working on increasing literacy for young children. They need tutors for kids and books. Residents are from many countries and many languages are spoken.

Tamara Brown has been involved with the Club’s annual block party since its inception fifteen years ago.

Many of the residents are from a place where no one has cared about them.

Solid Ground is an agency that has hunger and food outreach, serves homeless people, and provides housing programs. There is transportation access for low income people.

Solid Ground has a partnership with Mercy Housing. Mercy Housing manages Solid Ground’s properties. The mission of Solid Ground is to end poverty by addressing racism, unemployment, health issues. Most important are services to kids as poverty and homelessness tends to be generational. They encourage kids to stay in school and graduate from high school.

Many of the residents have disabilities. Mental health issues have escalated during Covid.

A Boys and Girls Club is coming to children’s program. It has had a delayed start due to COVID-19.

They have after school tutoring and activities. All are socially distant.

Solid Ground is endeavoring to make sure people have what they need for coming winter months.

It is a challenge to get people to wear masks and keep distant. Many people have mental health issues, often related to having been homeless.

The housing facility has families from many countries including Ethiopia, Kenya, Congo, Mexico, and Iran.  Most of our families speak English.  Here is the break up of the languages and the number of families:

Language# of households with primary language
English125
Amharic9
Farsi3
Tigrinya3
Spanish2
Arabic2
Swahili1
Afrikaans1
Lingala1
Urdu1

Please let me know if there are any more questions!

Fred Hutch: Call for Older Adult Volunteers for COVID-19 Research

Older adults have the most hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19 of any group in the United States. So far, not many persons older than age 70 have signed up for the COVID-19 Prevention Network (CoVPN) Volunteer Screening Registry.

Can You Help Us?

If you are or know of someone in your life who is older than age 70 and is interested in participating in coronavirus prevention research, would you consider passing along our website to them (https://www.PreventCOVID.org/)?

For persons without internet access, or who do not feel comfortable with online forms, they can also call our toll-free registry at 866-CVT-1919 (866-288-1919).

We appreciate your help and support.

Dr. Jim Kublin
CoVPN@fredhutch.org
Executive Director, CoVPN Principal Investigator, CoVPN Volunteer Screening Registry
COVID-19 Prevention Network

TINFA: Love of Learning – Virtual Celebration & Annual Fundraising Event

  • Saturday, October 3, 2020
  • 5:30 PM  7:30 PM

Join us for TINFA’s annual fundraising dinner – virtual this time to support kids in rural Guatemala so that they get the education they deserve.

We are excited to have, as a keynote speaker, award winning journalist Sonia Nazario. We will also connect to one of our partner teachers and students in Guatemala to hear the impact our technology and curriculum are having in our partner schools.

More information and registration here.

24 October is World Polio Day!

World Polio Day is a time for Rotarians and Rotaractors across the globe to raise awareness about our work to eradicate polio for good. If we stay committed to making progress, polio will be the second human disease ever to be eradicated.

In our fight to end polio, we’ve used our collective strength to defeat this devastating disease in almost every part of the world. This year, the World Health Organization’s African region was certified free of wild poliovirus – showing that eradication is possible even in very difficult circumstances. Wild poliovirus still paralyzes children in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and as long as polio exists anywhere, it remains a threat everywhere.

Let’s Take Action
A polio-free world is possible, but we can achieve it only by taking action together. With the challenges to vaccination programs posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s even more crucial that Rotary continues to build awareness and raise funds for polio eradication.

Join the effort to vaccinate children and end polio by organizing a World Polio Day event for your community. In 2019, Rotary members held more than 5,900 events in 136 countries. This year, online events and activities will allow us to expand our reach even more and inspire others to join us.

Not sure how to take action for World Polio Day? From virtual event ideas to social media posts and photos, the World Polio Day Toolkit can help you start planning and promoting your activities now.

Download the World Polio Day Toolkit

Today, at our first meeting during Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we were visited by Valerie Robinson of the American Cancer Society. Valerie shared the facts, including that 1 in 8 women in the US can expect a diagnosis of breast cancer sometime during her life, that men can get breast cancer, too and that the best measure for early diagnosis is regular mammography. Valerie conducted a quiz on the disease in which some Rotarians got some answers right. And President Steve Barton donned a pink boa in support of Breast Cancer Awareness.