By Editorial Staff
June 02, 2026
Introduction: A Milestone of Resilience
June 2026 marks a significant milestone for Alexis Fish: her first month as a 50-year-old breast cancer survivor. For Fish, this month is doubly meaningful. As a veteran advocate who has dedicated three decades of her life to supporting the LGBTQ+ community—working alongside pillars of advocacy like The Trevor Project, The LA Gay and Lesbian Center, and The TransLatin@ Coalition—June serves as both a celebration of Pride and a testament to her personal victory over triple-positive breast cancer.
Fish’s story is not merely one of medical survival; it is a narrative about the vital role that specialized non-profit organizations play in bridging the gaps left by a strained healthcare system. Her journey highlights the intersection of identity, community support, and the necessity of patient-centered advocacy.
The Chronology of a Crisis
In January 2025, Fish’s life shifted abruptly when she received a diagnosis of triple-positive breast cancer—an aggressive form of the disease that requires complex, multi-modal treatment.
For many patients, the initial diagnosis is followed by a period of shock, but for Fish, that shock was quickly compounded by the administrative nightmare of the modern healthcare system. As a member of a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO), she found herself trapped in a bureaucratic cycle. Months passed with critical appointments stalled, and hours were lost on hold with insurance representatives who offered no clear path forward.
"My initial entry into this new community was a bit rocky," Fish recounts. "The HMO approval process was brutal—hours spent on the phone with no answers, months where no appointments were available. I was fighting for care when all I wanted was to receive treatment."
By February 2025, while navigating this exhaustion, a contact from her synagogue mentioned Sharsheret, a national non-profit organization dedicated to supporting Jewish women and families facing breast and ovarian cancer. At the time, Fish was overwhelmed, simply adding the organization to a "never-ending call list" of tasks intended to move her care forward.
When she finally made the call, the experience was transformative. She recalls speaking with a Sharsheret social worker for over an hour, noting, "To say it gave me hope was an understatement. Finally, I was talking to someone from my community who got it."
The Anatomy of Support: How Non-Profits Fill the Void
The support Fish received from Sharsheret went far beyond emotional validation. It provided tangible, life-altering resources that her medical insurance simply did not cover.
Practical Interventions
Sharsheret’s support system operates on a "holistic" model, addressing the physical, emotional, and financial burdens of cancer treatment. For Fish, the assistance began with a "care box" tailored to the specific phases of her journey:

- Surgery and Chemo Supplies: Practical items like drain holders for post-operative recovery and anti-nausea supplies to mitigate chemotherapy side effects.
- Cosmetic Support: Essential resources, such as makeup kits for those dealing with hair loss and brow thinning, helped Fish regain a sense of self during the most grueling aspects of treatment.
- The "Game Changer": The most significant intervention, according to Fish, was a financial grant provided by the organization to assist with "cold capping"—a medical technique used to reduce chemotherapy-induced hair loss. For many patients, the cost of this technology is prohibitive, yet it remains a critical factor in maintaining a sense of normalcy and dignity during treatment.
Supporting Data: The Vital Role of Patient Navigators
Fish’s experience is backed by broader data regarding the effectiveness of patient advocacy groups. According to the American Cancer Society, patients who receive psychosocial support and patient navigation services report higher treatment adherence rates and improved quality of life.
- Financial Toxicity: Research indicates that "financial toxicity"—the economic hardship caused by the cost of cancer treatment—is a leading cause of psychological distress among survivors. Organizations like Sharsheret act as a financial buffer, providing grants that allow patients to access ancillary services (like cold capping) that are not considered "standard of care" by insurance providers.
- Psychosocial Impact: Peer-to-peer support, such as the card-writing initiative Fish participated in, is documented to reduce the feeling of isolation common among cancer patients. The "survivor-to-survivor" model creates a closed loop of support that is often more effective than traditional clinical psychological counseling alone.
A Return to the Court: Physical and Mental Rehabilitation
Two months after concluding her treatment in early 2026, Fish began the process of reintegrating into the life she led before her diagnosis. Her recovery plan was rigorous: physical therapy, weightlifting under medical supervision, and a commitment to movement during radiation.
However, the most significant test of her recovery was returning to the pickleball court. Before her diagnosis, Fish was a certified pickleball instructor, having mastered the sport during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"I hadn’t gone back to pickleball," she said. "I showed up and was partnered with a woman who actually went to my high school, which felt great. She too hadn’t played since the end of radiation—our goal was to just be present and have fun."
This return to the court was symbolic of the "new normal." It highlighted that while cancer changes a person, it does not have to strip them of their passions or their community connections.
Implications: The Future of Holistic Care
The story of Alexis Fish raises important questions about the state of healthcare in the United States. If a patient must rely on a non-profit organization to secure basic care, financial assistance for essential technology, and emotional support, what does this say about the current insurance landscape?
The Need for Systemic Change
- Administrative Reform: The "brutal" HMO approval process described by Fish is a common grievance. Policy advocates are pushing for more transparency in pre-authorization processes to ensure that life-saving treatment is not delayed by paperwork.
- Expanded Coverage: Technologies that improve the quality of life for cancer patients—such as scalp cooling systems—should be more widely covered by insurance, rather than relying on the limited budgets of charitable organizations.
- Community-Centric Advocacy: Fish’s experience proves that healthcare cannot be delivered in a vacuum. Organizations like Sharsheret, The Trevor Project, and others provide a necessary "human layer" to clinical care. Integrating these non-profit resources into hospital discharge plans could be the key to better patient outcomes.
Conclusion: Giving Back
As Fish looks toward her 50th year, her focus has shifted from receiving support to providing it. Participating in the Sharsheret West Pickleball Tournament allowed her to engage in a moment of profound reflection: the opportunity to write a note of support to someone just beginning their journey.
"I remember opening that first package and reading that card, knowing it came from another survivor," she reflected. "What a gift to be on the other side now and able to give back."
Fish’s journey serves as a powerful reminder that while medicine treats the disease, it is the community that treats the person. By elevating the voices of survivors and supporting the non-profits that empower them, the healthcare community can move toward a model that is not only clinically effective but profoundly human. As she celebrates this Pride month, Fish stands as a beacon of resilience, proving that even in the face of the most daunting diagnosis, one never has to walk the path alone.
