Spotlight On: The Triple Negative Breast Cancer Foundation

When 35-year-old Nancy Block-Zenna was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) and her insurance wouldn’t cover the cost of her care, a couple of her closest friends responded by selling beach towels. They hoped to spread awareness and fundraise money to help Block-Zenna receive treatment.
From these beach towels — adorned with a heart, a peace sign, and a pink ribbon — the “Peace Love and a Cure” campaign was born. Word quickly spread from the campaign’s origins in Long Island to the rest of New York, New Jersey, and Florida, where Nancy’s family and other friends had heard about her situation and wanted to help by fundraising themselves.
Block-Zenna’s insurance company ultimately agreed to pay for her chemotherapy, and with the money her friends had earned, they started the Triple Negative Breast Cancer (TNBC) Foundation in 2006.
“Her friends rallied around her because there was nothing for her at the time,” says Ricki Fairley, a trustee for the TNBC Foundation and a 10-year TNBC survivor. “No one really knew what triple-negative was. We didn’t have good doctors, good treatments — we are just getting treatments now almost 20 years later.”
Almost three years after her diagnosis, Nancy Block-Zenna died, saying goodbye to her family — including her little girl, Jolie — and all the friends who had supported her throughout her diagnosis and treatment.
What Is Triple-Negative Breast Cancer?
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Today, the TNBC Foundation serves as a supportive community for those who have been diagnosed with TNBC, as well as an educational resource on the disease. The organization continues to fundraise in order to help fund research on TNBC in the hopes that one day, a cure will be found.
Its Goal
Fairley says that the organization aims to act as a major resource for TNBC patients, survivors, and their families.
“We want to be the haven,” Fairley says. “When you get diagnosed, we are the source of all the information.”
Services It Provides
One of the things the TNBC Foundation offers members of its community are connections to online discussion groups made up of other people who are diagnosed with TNBC, according to Fairley. With these discussion groups, which are active 24/7, you can ask questions about treatments, side effects, and pretty much anything else having to do with your diagnosis.
“I remember waking up on my first chemo at four o’clock in the morning, having this bone pain, thinking, ‘Oh, my God, my cancer has gone to my bones,’” Fairley says. “I wasn’t gonna reach my doctor at 4 a.m., so I went into the discussion groups and they’re like, ‘Ricki, you’re fine. Take a Tylenol and go to bed.’”
On top of the 24/7 discussion boards, the organization hosts virtual support groups on three days of the week: "Metastatic Mondays," for people who have been diagnosed with metastatic TNBC, held on the first Monday of each month; "Tuesdays With TNBC" for all patients with TNBC on the first Tuesday of each month; and "Thriver Thursdays," for people with TNBC on the last Thursday of each month.
You can also connect with other community members through the foundation’s Facebook page.
Events
On March 3, 2024, the foundation kicked off TNBC Awareness Day to raise funds for TNBC. The foundation put 100 percent of the donations they received during the month of March toward research on TNBC.
The foundation has also hosted other fundraisers, including “No One Fights Alone,” along with webinars on a variety of topics related to TNBC. You can find recordings of their previous webinars and other upcoming events on their website.
Core Belief
The group's motto can be summed up with the phrase “No one fights alone.”
“We want people to feel like we have arms wrapped around them,” Fairley says. “That they have a place to go, that they have a support system, that they have love, and information, and resources.”

Ryland J. Gore, MD, MPH
Medical Reviewer
In addition to her professional responsibilities, Gore previously served on the board of directors for Every Woman Works, an Atlanta-based nonprofit organization whose mission is to empower women and help them transition into independence and stability from common setbacks. Gore served as the chairwoman of the American Cancer Society’s Making Strides Against Breast Cancer campaign in Atlanta for three years (2019 to 2021). She is currently the co-director of Nth Dimensions’ Strategic Mentoring Program and the alumni board chair of the Summer Health Professions Educational Program (SHPEP), which is a collaborative effort by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Association of American Medical Colleges, and the American Dental Education Association.
Gore is a highly sought after speaker, consultant, and lecturer on breast cancer and breast health, as well as women’s empowerment topics.

Leona Vaughn
Author
Leona Vaughn was born and raised in Seattle, where she also completed her undergraduate degree in journalism at the University of Washington (UW). During her time at UW, she worked as a freelance writer for her school newspaper, The Daily UW, where she wrote stories about mental health and wellness. Vaughn was also an editorial intern for The Seattle Globalist, a local news outlet, where she focused most of her writing on issues of race and diversity.
Toward the end of her undergraduate career, Vaughn tried her hand at political reporting and covered the legislative session in Olympia, Washington, where she continued to pursue mental health within the realm of politics.
At the end of 2020 — in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic — Vaughn moved to New York City to continue her education at Columbia University. She earned her master's degree in journalism in 2021.