Our call center will be closed on July 5 in observance of Independence Day. Please use the portals—available 24/7—to enroll in funds during this time. Our call center will reopen on July 6 at 9 am ET.

Pamela Moriarty: the gift of family

For Pamela Moriarty, family is everything. 

Growing up as an only child, Pamela Moriarty always knew she wanted to have a big family. With four adult children who gave her grandchildren and great-grandchildren, she thought she had everything.

But then at 85, she was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a type of blood cancer.  

After her doctor prescribed her a medication, she started researching her new diagnosis and treatment. When she found out how much it was going to cost her each month, her hope for treatment was crushed by her co-pay.

“There’s no way I can afford this,” she said.  

She called her doctor to explain that she couldn’t afford the treatment and they told her about the PAN Foundation. They also helped her apply for a grant right away.  

“I was approved almost immediately, and I thought, ‘I might have a chance of surviving this for a little while,’” she said.

Two years later, Pamela is not only surviving, but thriving. Her medication has been able to keep the multiple myeloma at bay and she is in partial remission.  

Thanks to the PAN Foundation, I am able to function. I am alive. And I am well.” 

In the two years since her diagnosis, she has focused on spending time with her family. She’s also returned to her passion for writing. Though she spent her career working as a special needs teacher to pay the bills, she spent her spare time writing and publishing various articles, poems, and short stories.

Once retired she was able to write her first book which was published on Amazon in 2016. The memoir, “What Happened to My Mother”, chronicled Pamela’s childhood growing up with her grandmother in Ireland after her father left and her mother passed away. It explores all the secrets her family kept from her when she was a child.  

Or so she thought.  

One day in 2018, Pamela’s cousin who lives in England called to ask if her father ever had any other children.  

“No, I’ve always been an only child,” she told her.