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Hope Lodge: A Home for Hope

When Elizabeth went for her annual mammogram in January 2022, she expected the same “no suspicious results” she’d always received. After all, she was an active, healthy retiree who didn’t have any family history of breast cancer.

Elizabeth and her partner, Dean, sold their DFW-area home in 2020 to spend their days traveling, hiking, bicycling, camping and enjoying the outdoors. But even with their travels, she found the time to care for her health and keep up with screenings—like her mammogram. She was about to leave for her next adventure in Costa Rica when she got the call that her mammogram had shown something suspicious. Concerned, Elizabeth quickly received additional testing before her trip. Those tests confirmed a diagnosis of Stage 1 breast cancer.

“When I received a phone call that the initial results came back as Stage 1 ‘in situ,’ I was shocked and scared,” she said.

Finding hope away from home

After doing her research, Elizabeth chose the cancer care team at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas for her care. Her care plan included a lumpectomy to remove the tumor, followed by radiation.

Because she didn’t live in Dallas, Elizabeth and Dean needed a place to stay while she received care. Her surgeon, Lucy Wallace, MD, recommended the nearby Hope Lodge. The American Cancer Society opened the Gene and Jerry Jones Family Hope Lodge on the campus of Baylor University Medical Center in 2021.

Elizabeth and Dean ring the Hope Bell, wrapping up her in-person treatment

Funded 100% by generous donors, it offers 50 private suites where out-of-town patients and their support persons can stay at no cost during their cancer treatment. For many, this home away from home relieves the stress of travel, financial strain and separation from loved ones during care.

Elizabeth was a Hope Lodge guest before and after her surgery, for surgery follow-up and oncology appointments, and for almost a month during her radiation treatments. “Staying at Hope Lodge was like a shelter from the storm,” she said. “If Hope Lodge weren’t available, my treatment would have been incalculably more stressful. None of my options would have been nearly as convenient or uplifting, not to mention avoiding
the significant additional expense.”

More than just cancer care

Hope Lodge is one example of our initiatives to care for the whole patient and family—because we understand that cancer affects all areas of life.

“Staying at Hope Lodge was like a shelter from the storm”

–Elizabeth

Some of the amenities include a fully stocked communal kitchen, community living and dining areas, activity rooms, free laundry facilities, a resource library, an outdoor healing garden and 24-hour staffing to support a nurturing environment.

Elizabeth especially enjoyed the convenient location that allowed her to walk to radiation treatment each day, the large communal kitchen so that she could still make her favorite healthy meals, and the quiet places to read or spend time outdoors.

The Hope Lodge also provided more than just a place to stay during treatment. It surrounded Elizabeth and Dean with support from staff and others going through similar experiences.
“Hope Lodge brings together cancer patients from almost every conceivable life situation,” Elizabeth said. “Having the opportunity to interact with other survivors made a huge difference in my outlook on my diagnosis and prognosis.”

Above all, Elizabeth says the staff members at the Hope Lodge stand out in her mind. Their kind-hearted attitude helped ease her anxiety throughout her stay and made the Hope Lodge a welcoming respite from cancer. “It is a life-changing experience that touches each guest and their families,” she said.

Thankful for early detection and hope

Now that Elizabeth has completed her in-person treatment, she’s back to doing what she loves—visiting family, spending time outdoors and exploring new places. She is thankful that a mammogram found her cancer when it was very treatable. She also encourages others to get their recommended screenings. “I count my blessings every day that I am a cancer survivor with a very good prognosis and the well-being to pursue my activities,” she said.

Elizabeth is also thankful for those who make Hope Lodge a reality for her and so many other cancer patients. Her experience wouldn’t have been possible without it. “The generosity of those who support Hope Lodge is saving lives,” Elizabeth said. “Cancer strikes people from all walks of life. I suspect a significant number would not be able to access the optimum treatment for their cancers if Hope Lodge didn’t exist.”

For more information or to help support the impactful work of Hope Lodge, please contact Christina Goodman at 214.820.4408 or Christina.Goodman@BSWHealth.org.