The MMRF Patient Navigation Center is a space for multiple myeloma patients and caregivers to connect with patient navigators for support. Connect via phone, email, or online web form. Whenever you have a question, our patient navigators are here to help.
Want to speak to a fellow patient? We have developed an original program that connects patients one-on-one for support and guidance. Our patient mentors are living with multiple myeloma in various stages and classifications, and they have undergone a variety of treatments. Share your experiences and hear other patient perspectives — get connected with a Myeloma Mentor.
Erin is the Manager of the Patient Navigation Center. She is passionate about helping to guide myeloma patients and to further research for the myeloma community. She has been a registered oncology nurse for eleven years. She served on the Patient Council Committee at the Norwalk Hospital and is a member of the Oncology Nursing Society. Erin is a graduate of Fairfield University’s School of Nursing and earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to becoming an oncology nurse, Erin was a healthcare representative for Pfizer and Sanofi-Aventis.
Grace has been a registered nurse for more than 30 years. She spent the last 28 years working at one of the largest myeloma programs in the US, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS). She was fortunate to have spent her career at UAMS under the tutelage of one of the most well-known myeloma physicians, Dr. Bart Barlogie. She received her nursing education in Ireland, and completed a bachelor of nursing degree at the University of Arkansas. She is a member of the Oncology Nursing Society and a nationally Oncology Certified Nurse. She is also a board certified medical-surgical registered nurse (RN-BC). She started at the MMRF in summer of 2020.
Brittany Hartmann, RN, previously worked as a Myeloma Clinical Coordinator in a high-volume call center at the Ruttenberg Treatment Center at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. There, she supported myeloma patients in a variety of ways from triaging calls, to educating patients on their myeloma, labs and test results, and coordinating with research and management to implement integral changed and streamline processes for access to new treatments. Prior to Mount Sinai, she worked as an oncology nurse at Saint Barnabas Medical Center in New Jersey. Brittany earned her Bachelor of Science in Nursing at the University of Delaware, where she had the opportunity to be a student nurse for a private physician for over a year.