A glass of wine, a few hors d'oeuvres, a couple of chocolate-dipped strawberries -- oh, and maybe one of those cheesecake thingies -- and pretty soon you're ready to have a mammogram.
That's the goal of radiologists at St. Francis Regional Medical Center in Shakopee, who hosted what was believed to have been the first mammogram party in Minnesota last Thursday evening. Judging from the 11 women who spilled out of a limo to the beat of "Funkytown" and boogied through the hospital doors, the strategy worked.
Sharon White, 45, of Inver Grove Heights had carried her appointment reminder around for four years, frequently remembering that she'd forgotten, yet never acting on it. But when her friend, Theresa Johnson of Lakeville, e-mailed that she was organizing a mammogram party, White replied within five minutes.
Michelle Brennan, 52, of Lakeville, had been diligent about her annual exams, yet inexplicably had let her last one go unscheduled. "So this was fate that Theresa did this."
Kelly Austin was the mammo virgin in the bunch. At 38, she's shy of the recommended age of 40 for such exams to begin, although some doctors recommend that women start as early as 35, especially if there's a family history of breast cancer.
Without a party, "I never would have done this," Austin said. "I even tried to get out of it. 'You old ladies go have fun.' But they wouldn't let me." As it was, she drifted asleep while getting a massage.
Have we mentioned the manicures?
St. Francis got the idea to offer mammo parties when Jimly Harris, manager of diagnostic services, heard of a similar program in Florida. The medical center is booking future parties, which it expects will occur on a monthly basis. Breast cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer-related deaths among U.S. women, yet fewer women are getting mammograms, said Mary Hestness, medical director of the radiology department.