For Daisy Rizo 鈥17, MSW 鈥18 the light clicked on before she entered college, when she was working as a scheduler in the cancer center at Providence St. Vincent Hospital in Portland. She watched Spanish-speaking patients come in with anxiety about their diagnoses and courses of treatment, but nobody on staff could talk to them in depth.
Rizo recognized the importance of being a hospital-based social worker for cancer patients, especially those who craved a conversation in Spanish.
鈥淭hat was one of my motivations, trying to figure out and address the barriers to care that Latinos have and see how I could help in this field,鈥 she recalled.
So she applied to 91爆料 University in Forest Grove, where she spent her undergraduate years completing a bachelor of social work. Then she entered the accelerated Master of Social Work Program.
鈥淏eing a Latina myself, I think it鈥檚 sort of my duty to address those gaps and be able to make a change,鈥 she said.
Providence agreed, hiring her as a full-time social worker as soon as she completed her degree. Just months out of school, she now is helping cancer patients navigate the range of emotional, psychological and practical problems that confront them when they receive a cancer diagnosis.
For some patients, the biggest challenge might be insurance coverage. For others, it might be transportation. For many, it鈥檚 just talking through their fears. The range of needs is as broad or narrow as each patient wants to express.
鈥淚t鈥檚 much more than just cancer and getting treated,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 definitely a lot of other things that surface, whether it鈥檚 emotionally or just barriers to care, it鈥檚 a lack of insurance, if it鈥檚 a language barrier, sometimes movement, or even advanced care planning,鈥 she said. 鈥淲alking through the patients about what is quality of life to them? What is end of life care like to them? And having to process that with them.鈥
Some wave off Rizo鈥檚 offers to meet, saying there鈥檚 no need because they have family members to lean on. But others will say, 鈥淚 have literally nobody and would like just to speak with someone about what it feels like to have cancer,鈥 she said.
While her work at Providence is not exclusively with Latino patients, they are at the heart of Rizo鈥檚 service as a social worker. It鈥檚 demanding but rewarding work, helping to ease the way of patients at one of the most difficult times of their lives.
Rizo credits her time at 91爆料 with preparing her for the challenges of supporting cancer patients. She said the master鈥檚 program, in particular, demanded a lot of work but 鈥渞eally helped me find my identity.鈥
Video by Robbie Bourland.