the patient impact of earlier routine screening
parminder punia of brampton has heard the words “you have breast cancer,” and knows what it’s like to have her life changed forever. in august 2021, at the age of 46, parminder felt a lump in her right breast. after weeks of exploration and tests, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.
if routine screening was accessible to parminder beginning at age 40, her breast cancer could have been caught earlier, before the disease had the opportunity to advance. parminder is passionate about advocating for better breast cancer screening for women in canada, especially those with a family history of the disease, like her daughter.
“unfortunately my cancer was more developed and had spread to my lymph nodes. it was a diagnosis that i never expected. it turned my world upside down,’ said parminder punia. ‘i can’t stress the importance of routine mammograms enough. screening detects breast cancer in its very early stages, ahead of a lump or any other symptoms present.”
1 in 8 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime. treatments for breast cancer are more effective and are better tolerated when started early.
progress tracker breast cancer registry