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As reported by The Hartford Courant, November 13, 2006.

What You'll Really, Really Want

Women Pack Overnight Bags With Necessities For Mastectomy Patients

By Hilary Waldman

When Maureen Lutz had her mastectomy, the doctor did a great job cutting off her breast.

But everybody seemed to forget about the little things afterward - such as her arm's being too sore afterward to reach the water cup on the hospital bed tray.

Or that her lips would be dry and cracked, and her feet might swell, making it difficult to wear anything but slippers home from the hospital.

A planner by nature and by vocation, Lutz had prepared carefully for her hospital stay. She brought beautiful nightgowns, books and audiotapes to keep her busy. She never opened her overnight bag.

What she needed, she discovered, was a water bottle she could tuck near her pillow so she didn't have to reach for a cup. She needed men's white-cotton ribbed undershirts that would protect her clothing and secure her drain tubes. She needed lip balm and a folder in which to stow the countless instruction sheets she was given. And she could have used a notepad to keep track of phone calls and write down everything the doctors and nurses were telling her.

"If someone had just told me the right underwear to take to the hospital...," Lutz says now, her two-night stay and homecoming might have been so much simpler.

She complained to her sister. She complained to her surgeon. And she started a list.

Five months after her surgery, the 58-year-old Ridgefield woman was still trying to figure out how to share her experience with other women.

Then, her plastic surgeon called. He had a patient who was considering the same mastectomy and breast-reconstruction procedure Lutz had just undergone and was looking to meet someone who had already been through it.

Lutz agreed to have lunch with the patient, Katie Greenberg, the next day. The night before, she raced around town gathering for Katie the items she wished she had brought to the hospital.

Lutz packed a white shopping bag with a water bottle, lip balm, a white men's undershirt, tissues, a roll of LifeSavers, an empty folder and notepad. She also brought the right bandages for dressing changes at home.

"She said, `I want you to have this. It will make your ordeal a little better,'" Greenberg recalled. "It was like my goodie bag, in a weird way."

The gift sparked a close friendship and a crusade in which Lutz and Greenberg have become partners.

Since their lunch date a little more than a year ago, Lutz has distributed 250 "Necessities Bags" to women heading for mastectomies in hospitals across Connecticut and Westchester County, N.Y.

Lutz, who raised two children before starting her career as a fundraiser for small charities, tapped her experience to start her own nonprofit, called Necessities. Launched with donations with her closest girlfriends, the project's goal is to provide every woman facing a mastectomy in Connecticut with a "necessities bag" before she checks into the hospital.

Nancy Baccaro, the breast-cancer nurse practitioner at the University of Connecticut Health Center, distributed the first bags to her patients last summer. She said they allow her to offer care that she could not otherwise deliver.

"Although we are educated in the care, diagnosis and treatment, the reality is that unless you have walked the walk yourself, you cannot fully know what is needed," Baccaro said.

Patients at Hartford Hospital, St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center and Yale-New Haven Hospital also are offered bags under the program.

The contents of the bag have hardly changed since Lutz gave Greenberg the white paper shopping bag in the summer of 2005. Unable to pass along her advice to every woman over lunch, Greenberg has written it in a booklet. She also added a soft pillow to pad the surgical area so patients can wear a seatbelt comfortably on the ride home from the hospital. An emery board was added to the hospital-supply packet at Greenberg's suggestion.

The supplies now are tucked into a white canvas bag with subtle silver trim and a lavender logo. The bags are stuffed so there is no room for women to pack unnecessary items, such as pretty pajamas. And there are no pink ribbons.

"I don't want any woman walking out of her doctor's office with a bag that says, `Guess what, I'm losing my breast,'" Lutz said.

For now, Lutz, Greenberg and other volunteers shop for supplies, pack the bags and deliver them to doctor's offices and hospitals. The St. Mary's Sewing Guild makes the pillows. The foundation is supported by Lutz's friends, a few small grants, and checks mailed by women who have received the bags.

Although Lutz says she wishes she would someday go out of business for lack of women needing breast cancer surgery, the demand continues to grow. More than 210,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the United States each year. Almost 3,000 of them live in Connecticut.

To keep up with the demand in Connecticut alone, Lutz estimates she'll have to raise $50,000 a year, which means that someday she'll need to come up with some kind of big fundraiser. But for now, she's happy when a donor walks into her office with a roll of LifeSavers.

Lutz says the idea of a woman-to-woman network passing along practical advice and necessities is powerful, and she knows it will endure.

"If someone had walked in the [hospital room] door with a tube of Bacitracin instead of pink roses," she says, "I would have been thrilled."