Deborah Manst, MD MPH
Oncogeneralist

Young And A Survivor (YAAS!) Network for Health Equity for Young Breast Cancer Survivors brings together healthcare providers, community-based organizations, young survivors, metastatic thrivers, and co-survivors to to bring resources and services to young women in Chicago affected by breast cancer, their co-survivors, and their communities.
The YAAS! Network is especially focused on young women who have limited access to resources and support because of systemic or structural barriers, including race, color, ethnicity, sexual orientation, sexual identity, disability, education, income, citizenship status, or language. The YAAS! Network provides education and training to healthcare providers and community-based health workers to increase awareness of the needs of young women affected by breast cancer to provide young women with the support they need.
Advocate for comprehensive, high quality, supportive care for all young women in Chicago affected by breast cancer, their families, and their communities.
Develop a sustainable collaborative infrastructure to support and enhance the work of all providers who deliver services to young women in Chicago who are affected by breast cancer.
Meet the

team

Program Director

Liza (pronounced Leeza) Papautsky, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical & Health Information Sciences at University of Illinois Chicago. Her work is focused on characterizing how patients acquire knowledge and make decisions across their patient journey within and outside of the healthcare system. She collaborates with patient advocates, clinicians, and scientists to inform solutions that meet people where they are. She earned her M.S. and Ph.D. at Wright State University in Dayton, OH where she studied human factors psychology, a field that is focused on studying, developing, and implementing human-centered support.

YAAS! Project Director

Tamara Hamlish, Ph.D. is a Research Scientist at the University of Illinois Cancer Center and Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine. Her work investigates the critical role of survivor experiences for disparities across the cancer care continuum, from prevention and screening to palliative care and hospice. In collaboration with multi-disciplinary teams, she also leads efforts to build healthcare capacity and workforce development for survivorship care in communities that experience structural and systemic barriers to high quality care. She earned her M.A. and PhD. From the University of Chicago.