“Everyday I feel afraid,” Isabel shares. “I want to heal, and to have more time with my family. We just don’t have the financial resources to afford chemotherapy.”
55-year-old Isabel has cervical cancer. She is a mother of three children and lives in a small home in rural Guatemala.
“She told our staff that she has never had a steady job,” shares our medical partner, Wuqu’ Kawoq (WK). “Since childhood and adolescence she has worked as a housewife. Her husband is a farmer but he stopped working and supporting her about 10 years ago for undisclosed reasons. Now, she works selling clothing and crafts. Her dream for the future is to have greater success with her business and seek other forms of income for her family. Her favorite activity is attending church with her only brother.”
Isabel came to WK after living with uncomfortable symptoms for three years.
“She never had the courage or the money to seek care,” WK says. “There is a lot of discrimination against Indigenous people in the public healthcare system.”
For $1,430, Isabel will receive chemotherapy to treat her cancer. Not only will she undergo treatment, but she will receive all of WK’s services – bus transportation from her village to the government hospital, translation while in the hospital, and general case management.
“Without assistance, Isabel will be unable to afford the life-saving care she needs,” WK says.