Wyoming Cancer Support Resources
Wyoming is the least populous state in the United States — roughly 580,000 people spread across 97,000 square miles of plains, basins, and mountain ranges. That ratio of land to people produces a healthcare geography with no parallel east of the Mississippi. Wyoming has no NCI-designated cancer center within its borders and no academic medical center with a comprehensive oncology program. The most capable cancer facilities accessible to Wyoming residents are out of state: Huntsman Cancer Institute in Salt Lake City for western and central Wyoming patients, University of Colorado Cancer Center in Aurora for southern Wyoming, and Billings Clinic in Montana for northern Wyoming communities near the Montana border. For complex diagnoses, clinical trials, or procedures like bone marrow transplant and CAR-T therapy, Wyoming patients routinely travel 200 to 400 miles one way.
Wyoming Medical Center in Casper is the state’s largest hospital and most comprehensive cancer care site, serving as the practical hub for central and eastern Wyoming. Cheyenne Regional Medical Center anchors the southeast. In smaller communities — Riverton, Lander, Rock Springs, Sheridan, Cody, Gillette, and Jackson — patients often begin treatment locally at community hospitals and then travel for surgery, radiation, or specialist consultation. Wyoming’s winters close or severely degrade mountain passes for weeks at a time, turning what looks manageable on a map into a genuine logistical crisis for a cancer patient scheduled for twice-weekly radiation in Denver.
Wyoming’s Native American communities — primarily the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho Nations on the Wind River Indian Reservation in Fremont County — face cancer health disparities compounded by poverty, historical trauma, geographic isolation, and limited IHS resources. Fremont County has among the highest cancer mortality rates in the state. Wyoming also carries a legacy of uranium and trona mining that has elevated cancer incidence in certain communities, particularly in Fremont, Carbon, and Sweetwater counties. The organizations and programs listed here — from state agencies and community health workers to national nonprofits — represent the network of support that Wyoming cancer patients must often assemble themselves in the absence of a large, centralized cancer support system.
Oil and gas workers represent a significant share of Wyoming’s workforce, and the occupational health implications of decades in the energy industry are becoming clearer. Exposure to benzene, hydrogen sulfide, crystalline silica from fracking operations, and other industrial chemicals is associated with elevated cancer risk. Many energy sector workers carry employer-sponsored insurance through active employment but face coverage gaps after leaving the industry, retiring early, or aging out of working years. Energy communities in Campbell County, Sublette County, and around Rock Springs often lack the social support infrastructure that workers in more densely populated areas might access during cancer treatment.
Wyoming’s insurance landscape is challenging. The state did not expand Medicaid until 2023 — relatively late in the national Medicaid expansion timeline — meaning a generation of low-income Wyomingites went without coverage during years when early cancer detection could have mattered most. Even with expansion, coverage gaps remain, and Wyoming’s rural communities have limited primary care infrastructure to support cancer screening at the population level. Telehealth has expanded access for some services, particularly mental health support and consultations, but does not replace the need for hands-on oncology care.
Wyoming’s veteran population is served by the Cheyenne VA Medical Center and community-based outpatient clinics in Casper, Gillette, Powell, Sheridan, and other cities. Veterans whose cancer may be tied to service-related chemical exposure — Agent Orange, toxic burn pits, contaminated water, or other hazardous material exposure — should contact the VA to evaluate eligibility for covered cancer care and disability compensation. Wyoming 2-1-1 is also available statewide as a starting point to find local support services, and several national programs in this directory can provide financial and logistical assistance regardless of insurance status.
Filter by resource type or search by name, city, or keyword. New to a diagnosis in Wyoming? Start with Wyoming 2-1-1 (dial 2-1-1) — navigators can connect you with local transportation, food, financial aid, and support services in your county.
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Statewide Resources
Wyoming 2-1-1
📍 Statewide
Wyoming 2-1-1, operated through United Way of Natrona County, is the statewide helpline for health and human services. Navigators can connect cancer patients with transportation assistance, food programs, emergency financial help, housing support, and mental health resources in any Wyoming county. For patients in rural and remote communities with limited local infrastructure, 2-1-1 is often the most reliable starting point.
- Dial 2-1-1, available statewide
- Online database at wy211.org
- Community resource referrals in all counties
- 24/7 availability
Who: Any Wyoming resident
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
American Cancer Society – Rocky Mountain Region
📍 Statewide (regional office serves Wyoming)
The ACS serves Wyoming patients through its 24/7 helpline (1-800-227-2345), Road to Recovery volunteer driver program, peer mentorship (First Connections, Reach to Recovery), and lodging assistance. Given Wyoming’s distances, ACS Hope Lodges at partner locations in Denver and Salt Lake City are important resources for Wyoming patients traveling to out-of-state cancer centers.
- Road to Recovery: free rides to treatment
- First Connections peer mentorship
- Hope Lodge lodging (Denver and Salt Lake City)
- 24/7 helpline: 1-800-227-2345
- Reach to Recovery (breast cancer peer support)
Who: All Wyoming cancer patients and caregivers
Cost: Free services
Phone: 2-1-1
CancerCare
📍 Statewide (national, phone and online)
CancerCare provides free professional counseling with oncology social workers, telephone and online support groups, limited financial assistance grants, and patient education entirely by phone and online. For Wyoming patients in remote communities where in-person cancer support groups do not exist, CancerCare’s remote services fill a critical gap.
- Free counseling with oncology social workers (by phone)
- Online and telephone support groups
- Limited financial grants for treatment-related costs
- Caregiver support programs
Who: All Wyoming cancer patients and caregivers
Cost: Free; call 1-800-813-4673
Phone: 2-1-1
Patient Advocate Foundation – Co-Pay Relief Program
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
PAF’s Co-Pay Relief Program provides direct grants to insured Wyoming cancer patients for co-pays, co-insurance, and deductibles. PAF case managers also help with insurance denial appeals. Wyoming’s relatively thin insurance market and high out-of-pocket costs for patients treated at out-of-state cancer centers make PAF assistance especially valuable.
- Direct grants for co-pays and deductibles
- Insurance denial appeal assistance
- Multiple cancer-type funds available
Who: Insured WY patients with documented financial hardship
Cost: Free assistance
Phone: 2-1-1
HealthWell Foundation
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
HealthWell Foundation provides grants covering insurance premiums, deductibles, and treatment co-pays for patients with cancer and other serious illnesses. Disease-specific funds cover many cancer types. Wyoming patients who pay out-of-network rates because their local hospital lacks the needed specialist are particularly likely to face high deductibles that HealthWell can help offset.
- Premium and deductible assistance
- Co-pay grants for cancer treatment
- Funds for specific cancer diagnoses
Who: WY patients meeting income and disease criteria
Cost: Free grants
Phone: 2-1-1
PAN Foundation (Patient Access Network)
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
PAN Foundation provides disease-specific financial assistance for underinsured patients, covering medication and treatment out-of-pocket costs. Income eligibility reaches up to 500% of federal poverty level for some programs. Wyoming patients who are working and insured but still struggling with high costs from out-of-state treatment are often eligible.
- Medication and treatment co-pay grants
- Broad income eligibility
- Dozens of cancer-type specific funds
Who: Underinsured WY cancer patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: 2-1-1
NeedyMeds
📍 Statewide (national database, applies to WY residents)
NeedyMeds provides a free searchable database of pharmaceutical patient assistance programs and a directory of free and low-cost clinics in Wyoming. For Wyoming cancer patients on oral chemotherapy or expensive targeted therapies, manufacturer-sponsored patient assistance programs found through NeedyMeds can provide medications at no cost.
- Searchable database of patient assistance programs by drug name
- Free drug discount cards
- Directory of free/low-cost clinics in WY
Who: All WY cancer patients needing medication cost help
Cost: Free to use
Phone: 2-1-1
Imerman Angels
📍 Statewide (national, remote/phone-based)
Imerman Angels matches Wyoming cancer patients with a survivor mentor — someone who has faced the same cancer type — for one-on-one peer support by phone, email, or video. In a state where in-person support groups for specific cancer diagnoses often do not exist within reasonable driving distance, this remote mentorship is one of the most practical peer connections available.
- Survivor mentor matching by cancer type and background
- Caregiver-to-caregiver matching
- Phone, email, and video support
- Available for 80+ cancer types
Who: Wyoming cancer patients, survivors, and caregivers
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Triage Cancer
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
Triage Cancer provides free education on the legal and practical rights of cancer patients: FMLA, disability insurance, COBRA, health insurance options, and estate planning. Wyoming cancer patients — many of whom work in industries like ranching, oil and gas, and mining with limited HR infrastructure — may be particularly unfamiliar with their leave and insurance rights.
- Free legal rights education for cancer patients
- FMLA, SSDI, and insurance rights guides
- Webinars and individual navigation
Who: All Wyoming cancer patients and caregivers
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Cleaning for a Reason
📍 Statewide (national, partner companies in WY communities)
Cleaning for a Reason connects cancer patients with cleaning companies that donate free home cleanings during active treatment. Wyoming partner companies are available in Casper, Cheyenne, Laramie, and other communities. Cancer patients can search for partner companies at their address on the organization’s website.
- Free home cleaning during active treatment
- Up to 2 cleanings per month
- Partner company locator by Wyoming address
Who: WY cancer patients in active treatment
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Angel Flight Rocky Mountain
📍 Statewide (serves WY airports including Cheyenne, Casper, Jackson Hole, Riverton, Sheridan)
Angel Flight Rocky Mountain coordinates free private air transportation for Wyoming cancer patients traveling to out-of-state cancer centers — including University of Colorado Cancer Center in Denver, Huntsman Cancer Institute in Salt Lake City, and MD Anderson in Houston for complex cases. Volunteer pilots fly medically stable patients at no cost. Given Wyoming’s distances and winters, Angel Flight is often the most practical transportation option for patients without private means.
- Free flights to cancer treatment centers out of state
- Serves multiple Wyoming airports
- Advance scheduling required (7–10 days)
- Patient must be ambulatory and medically stable
Who: WY cancer patients who cannot afford commercial travel to treatment
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Medicaid Non-Emergency Medical Transportation (NEMT)
📍 Statewide
Wyoming Medicaid covers non-emergency medical transportation for eligible members traveling to cancer appointments, including out-of-state travel when medically necessary. Wyoming Medicaid’s NEMT program covers some of the longest individual trip distances in the country. Contact Wyoming Medicaid’s NEMT broker to arrange rides in advance; cross-state trips to Denver or Salt Lake City require advance authorization.
- Free rides to cancer appointments for Medicaid members
- Covers out-of-state travel when medically necessary
- Advance scheduling and authorization required
Who: Wyoming Medicaid members
Cost: Free (Medicaid-covered)
Phone: 2-1-1
Food Bank of Wyoming
📍 Statewide (Casper distribution center; partner agencies statewide)
The Food Bank of Wyoming distributes food through a network of partner food pantries and meal programs across all of Wyoming’s 23 counties, including remote rural communities. Cancer patients undergoing treatment can access food assistance at partner sites without lengthy paperwork at most locations. The website includes a food pantry finder searchable by city or zip code.
- Food pantry network in all 23 Wyoming counties
- Pantry finder at wyomingfoodbank.org
- SNAP application assistance
- BackPack and senior nutrition programs
Who: Any Wyoming resident facing food insecurity, including cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Legal Services
📍 Statewide (Cheyenne, Casper, Laramie, Riverton, and remote intake)
Wyoming Legal Services provides free civil legal aid to low-income Wyoming residents. Cancer patients can receive assistance with Medicaid coverage disputes, insurance denials, SSDI/SSI disability applications and appeals, housing instability, and medical debt. Remote intake is available statewide by phone; income limits apply.
- Free legal representation for qualifying patients
- Insurance and Medicaid coverage appeals
- SSDI/SSI disability assistance
- Housing and medical debt issues
- Statewide intake: 1-800-442-6170
Who: Low-income WY cancer patients; income limits apply
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Department of Health – Medical Assistance Programs
📍 Statewide
Wyoming’s Department of Health administers Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), the Wyoming Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (free screenings for qualifying women), LIHEAP energy assistance, and SNAP food benefits. Cancer patients who lose income during treatment may qualify for multiple programs; the Wyoming Benefits Online portal allows simultaneous applications.
- Wyoming Medicaid enrollment
- Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program (free screenings)
- SNAP food benefits
- LIHEAP home energy assistance
- Online application at wyomingbenefits.wyo.gov
Who: WY cancer patients who meet income requirements
Cost: Free benefits
Phone: 2-1-1
NAMI Wyoming
📍 Statewide (Cheyenne-based; remote services statewide)
NAMI Wyoming provides education, advocacy, and support for individuals facing mental health challenges, including cancer-related depression and anxiety. Free NAMI support groups, the NAMI Helpline (1-800-950-NAMI), and online peer support programs are available to Wyoming residents in communities where local mental health support groups are sparse or nonexistent.
- NAMI Helpline: 1-800-950-6264
- Free online and telephone support groups
- Peer-to-peer programs
- Family education resources
Who: Cancer patients and families dealing with mental health impacts
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Veterans Commission – VSO Services
📍 Statewide (county VSOs statewide; Cheyenne VA Medical Center)
Wyoming’s Veterans Service Officers help veterans access VA healthcare, disability compensation for service-connected cancers (Agent Orange, burn pits via PACT Act), and pension benefits. The Cheyenne VA Medical Center serves Wyoming veterans and coordinates cancer care with University of Colorado. VA Beneficiary Travel reimburses travel costs to the medical center for qualifying veterans.
- VA healthcare enrollment assistance
- Disability claims for service-connected cancers
- PACT Act claims for burn pit and toxic exposure cancers
- Beneficiary Travel reimbursement
- County VSOs in all WY counties
Who: Wyoming military veterans with cancer
Cost: Free VSO services; VA care at low or no cost
Phone: 2-1-1
Casper & Central Wyoming
Casper is Wyoming’s second-largest city and its most important cancer care hub. Wyoming Medical Center, the state’s largest hospital, is located here. Its cancer program offers medical oncology, chemotherapy infusion, and radiation therapy, and serves patients from a broad central Wyoming catchment area including Natrona, Converse, and Platte counties. For surgery and complex oncology, WMC patients frequently transfer to Denver or Salt Lake City. The United Way of Natrona County and community action organizations in Casper provide the best-organized social support network of any Wyoming city.
Wyoming Medical Center – Cancer Program & Navigation
📍 Casper
Wyoming Medical Center (WMC) is the state’s most comprehensive community hospital cancer program, providing medical oncology, chemotherapy infusion, radiation therapy, and surgical oncology services. Patient navigators, oncology social workers, and a financial counselor assist patients in central Wyoming. WMC’s cancer program is accredited by the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer.
- Medical oncology and chemotherapy infusion
- Radiation oncology
- Oncology patient navigation
- Social work and financial counseling
- Referral coordination to Denver/SLC for complex care
Who: Central Wyoming cancer patients; referrals accepted statewide
Cost: Insurance-billed; charity care available
Phone: 2-1-1
Natrona County Interfaith Council – Emergency Assistance
📍 Casper
The Natrona County Interfaith Council coordinates emergency financial assistance among Casper-area churches and community organizations, providing help with utilities, rent, food, and basic needs for residents in crisis. Cancer patients in Casper who face sudden financial hardship during treatment can apply through the council’s centralized intake. This type of faith-based mutual aid network is one of the most reliable emergency resources in Wyoming’s cities.
- Emergency utility and rent assistance
- Food assistance referrals
- Coordination across multiple faith communities
- No requirements related to faith or religion
Who: Casper-area cancer patients facing financial emergency
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
ACS Hope Lodge – Denver (for Wyoming patients)
📍 Aurora, CO (serves WY patients traveling to University of Colorado Cancer Center and UCHealth)
Wyoming has no ACS Hope Lodge within state borders. The ACS Hope Lodge in Aurora, Colorado (near the University of Colorado Cancer Center) provides free lodging for cancer patients and one caregiver who travel from Wyoming for treatment. Central and southern Wyoming patients traveling to Denver-area cancer centers can request reservation through the ACS at 1-800-227-2345.
- Free lodging for patient and one caregiver
- Located near University of Colorado Cancer Center (Aurora)
- Full kitchen, laundry, and common spaces
- Reservation required; call ACS 1-800-227-2345
Who: WY patients in active treatment at Denver-area cancer centers
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Cheyenne & Southeast Wyoming
Cheyenne is Wyoming’s capital and largest city, and its location just 100 miles north of Denver makes it the Wyoming community with the easiest access to major out-of-state cancer care. The University of Colorado Cancer Center in Aurora is approximately 100 miles from Cheyenne — roughly the distance a Connecticut patient might drive to Yale. Southeast Wyoming residents in Laramie County and Albany County (Laramie/University of Wyoming) are comparatively well-positioned for cancer care, though they still lack local comprehensive cancer services. Cheyenne Regional Medical Center serves as the regional oncology hub, with transfer arrangements to University of Colorado for complex cases.
Cheyenne Regional Medical Center – Cancer Services
📍 Cheyenne
Cheyenne Regional Medical Center provides outpatient chemotherapy infusion, radiation oncology, and medical oncology services for southeast Wyoming residents. Social workers and care coordinators assist with referrals to the University of Colorado Cancer Center for surgery, complex oncology, and clinical trials. CRMC’s cancer program is accredited by the American College of Surgeons.
- Chemotherapy infusion and medical oncology
- Radiation oncology
- Social work and care coordination
- Referrals to University of Colorado (Aurora)
Who: Cancer patients in Laramie County and southeast Wyoming
Cost: Insurance-billed; charity care available
Phone: 2-1-1
University of Colorado Cancer Center (for southeast WY patients)
📍 Aurora, CO (approximately 100 miles south of Cheyenne)
The University of Colorado Cancer Center in Aurora is an NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center and the primary out-of-state cancer referral destination for southeast Wyoming patients. UCCC offers full multidisciplinary oncology services, clinical trials, bone marrow transplant, CAR-T therapy, and rare cancer programs. The center maintains referral relationships with Cheyenne Regional Medical Center.
- Full NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center services
- Clinical trials across all cancer types
- Bone marrow transplant and CAR-T therapy
- Patient navigation and financial counseling
- ~100 miles from Cheyenne; ~200 miles from Casper
Who: SE Wyoming patients needing comprehensive cancer care or clinical trials
Cost: Insurance-billed; financial assistance available
Phone: 2-1-1
Western Wyoming & Wind River Basin
Western Wyoming encompasses some of the most isolated communities in the lower 48 states. Jackson Hole — the wealthiest enclave in Wyoming — has virtually no local oncology, and patients there fly or drive to Salt Lake City (280 miles) or Denver (550 miles) for treatment. Rock Springs and Green River in Sweetwater County have Memorial Hospital of Sweetwater County as the local hospital, with transfers to Salt Lake City as the primary referral pathway. Evanston and Kemmerer in Uinta and Lincoln counties are 1.5 hours from Salt Lake City. The Wind River Basin (Fremont County) — home to Riverton, Lander, and the Wind River Indian Reservation — combines the challenges of rural poverty and Native American health disparities with distances of 3+ hours to either Denver or Salt Lake City.
Huntsman Cancer Institute (for western and central WY patients)
📍 Salt Lake City, UT (approximately 180–280 miles from western Wyoming)
Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City is an NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center and the primary out-of-state cancer referral destination for western and central Wyoming patients. HCI is widely regarded as one of the strongest cancer centers in the Mountain West, with particular strengths in genetics, rare cancers, and clinical trials. Patient navigators assist Wyoming patients with lodging, transportation, and care coordination.
- Full NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center services
- Clinical trials and rare cancer programs
- Bone marrow transplant and CAR-T therapy
- Patient navigation for Wyoming patients
- Closest major cancer center for Rock Springs, Evanston, Riverton, and Jackson
Who: Western and central Wyoming cancer patients needing comprehensive care
Cost: Insurance-billed; financial assistance available
Phone: 2-1-1
Fremont County Community Action Agency
📍 Riverton (Fremont County / Wind River Basin)
Fremont County’s community action services provide emergency financial assistance, utility and energy assistance, housing support, and food access for low-income residents in the Wind River Basin. Cancer patients in Riverton, Lander, Dubois, Shoshoni, and surrounding communities facing financial hardship during treatment can connect with case managers here. Contact Wyoming 2-1-1 to be connected to current Fremont County assistance programs.
- Emergency financial assistance
- LIHEAP energy assistance
- Food access and nutrition programs
- Benefits enrollment support
Who: Low-income cancer patients in Fremont County
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Northern Wyoming
Northern Wyoming — Sheridan, Gillette, Buffalo, Cody, and the Bighorn Basin — sits closer to Billings, Montana than to either Denver or Salt Lake City. For many northern Wyoming cancer patients, Billings Clinic or SCL Health’s Saint Vincent Healthcare in Billings is the practical out-of-state referral center, though some patients travel south to Casper for initial evaluation. Campbell County Health in Gillette and Sheridan Memorial Hospital provide community oncology access, but both are limited to infusion and outpatient services.
Campbell County Health – Cancer Services
📍 Gillette
Campbell County Health provides outpatient chemotherapy infusion, cancer screening, and oncology consultation services for cancer patients in the Gillette area and surrounding northeast Wyoming communities. Social workers coordinate referrals to Billings or Casper for more complex cases and assist patients with financial assistance and community support programs.
- Outpatient chemotherapy infusion
- Cancer screening programs
- Social work and care coordination
- Referrals to Casper (WMC) and Billings for complex care
Who: Cancer patients in Campbell County and northeast Wyoming
Cost: Insurance-billed; financial assistance available
Phone: 2-1-1
Billings Clinic Cancer Center (for northern WY patients)
📍 Billings, MT (approximately 130–200 miles north of Sheridan and Gillette)
Billings Clinic Cancer Center is the most accessible major cancer center for many northern Wyoming communities, including Sheridan, Gillette, Buffalo, Greybull, and the Bighorn Basin. Billings Clinic provides comprehensive oncology services with a multidisciplinary tumor board, clinical trial access, and patient navigation. It is not an NCI-designated center but operates at a higher level than any hospital within northern Wyoming.
- Comprehensive medical and radiation oncology
- Multidisciplinary tumor board
- Patient navigation and social work
- Clinical trial access (affiliate trial sites)
- Closer to northern WY than Denver or Salt Lake City
Who: Northern Wyoming cancer patients (Sheridan, Gillette, Cody, Bighorn Basin)
Cost: Insurance-billed; financial assistance available
Phone: 2-1-1
Native Communities & Wind River Reservation
The Wind River Indian Reservation in Fremont County is home to the Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho Nations — Wyoming’s only federally recognized tribes. The reservation spans approximately 2.2 million acres, and its residents face cancer mortality rates significantly higher than the state average, driven by poverty, limited healthcare access, historical trauma, and chronic disease prevalence. The Indian Health Service (IHS) Wind River Service Unit provides primary care on the reservation, but oncology services require referral off-reservation to Riverton, Casper, or Billings. Cultural safety and community-specific approaches to cancer support are essential in this population.
Indian Health Service – Wind River Service Unit
📍 Fort Washakie (Eastern Shoshone) and Arapaho (Northern Arapaho)
The IHS Wind River Service Unit provides primary care and preventive health services to Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribal members. IHS funds cancer screenings and coordinates referrals to off-reservation oncology through the Contract Health Services (CHS) program. Tribal members with cancer who receive care off-reservation may have treatment costs covered through CHS if pre-authorized. Patients should contact their IHS facility immediately upon diagnosis to initiate CHS authorization.
- Primary care and cancer screening on-reservation
- Contract Health Services (CHS) for off-reservation oncology referrals
- Coordination with Riverton Memorial and Wyoming Medical Center
- Transportation assistance through tribal programs
Who: Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho tribal members
Cost: Free for eligible tribal members
Phone: 2-1-1
Eastern Shoshone Tribal Social Services
📍 Fort Washakie (Wind River Reservation)
Eastern Shoshone Tribal Social Services provides emergency assistance, housing support, and social case management to tribal members. Cancer patients who are Eastern Shoshone members can connect with tribal social services for help navigating the intersection of IHS benefits, state Medicaid, and off-reservation cancer care logistics, including transportation coordination and financial emergency support.
- Emergency financial assistance for tribal members
- Housing and basic needs support
- Social case management
- Benefits navigation (IHS, Medicaid, BIA)
Who: Eastern Shoshone tribal members with cancer
Cost: Free for eligible tribal members
Phone: 2-1-1
Northern Arapaho Tribe – Social Services
📍 Arapaho (Wind River Reservation)
The Northern Arapaho Tribe provides social services and assistance programs for tribal members, including emergency financial support, housing assistance, and coordination with IHS and state agencies. Cancer patients who are Northern Arapaho members should engage tribal social services early after diagnosis to access the full range of benefits available through tribal, federal (IHS, BIA), and state programs simultaneously.
- Emergency financial assistance
- Housing support
- Benefits navigation (IHS, BIA, Medicaid)
- Community coordination and referrals
Who: Northern Arapaho tribal members with cancer
Cost: Free for eligible tribal members
Phone: 2-1-1
Pediatric & Young Adult Resources
Children’s Hospital Colorado – Pediatric Oncology (for WY families)
📍 Aurora, CO (primary pediatric oncology destination for most of Wyoming)
Wyoming has no dedicated pediatric cancer program within its borders. Virtually all Wyoming children diagnosed with cancer are referred to Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora or Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City. Children’s Hospital Colorado is affiliated with the University of Colorado Cancer Center and provides full-service pediatric oncology, bone marrow transplant, and clinical trials. Social workers and family navigators help Wyoming families manage the logistical challenges of out-of-state treatment.
- Full pediatric oncology program
- Clinical trials for childhood cancers
- Family navigation and social work
- Ronald McDonald House nearby for lodging
- Primary destination for most WY children with cancer
Who: Wyoming children (birth–18) with cancer
Cost: Insurance-billed; financial assistance available
Phone: 2-1-1
Ronald McDonald House – Denver (for WY families)
📍 Denver/Aurora, CO (serves Wyoming families at Children’s Hospital Colorado)
Ronald McDonald House Charities of Denver provides free or low-cost lodging for families of children receiving treatment at Children’s Hospital Colorado. For Wyoming families relocated to Denver for months of pediatric cancer treatment, the Ronald McDonald House offers a supportive community environment and dramatically reduces lodging costs. Families apply directly through the hospital social work team.
- Free or low-cost lodging near Children’s Hospital Colorado
- Meals, laundry, and community spaces
- Long-term stays available during extended treatment
- Apply through Children’s Hospital social work
Who: Wyoming families with children in treatment at Children’s Hospital Colorado
Cost: Free or low cost ($25/night suggested donation)
Phone: 2-1-1
Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation
📍 Statewide (national, serves Wyoming families)
Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation provides direct financial assistance to Wyoming families with children diagnosed with cancer through the Empowering Families grant program. Grants cover travel, lodging, and out-of-pocket treatment expenses — critically important for Wyoming families traveling hundreds of miles to Denver or Salt Lake City for their child’s treatment.
- Empowering Families financial grants
- Travel and lodging assistance for out-of-state treatment
- Pediatric cancer research funding
Who: Wyoming families with children under 21 diagnosed with cancer
Cost: Free grants
Phone: 2-1-1
Stupid Cancer (Young Adult Cancer Community)
📍 Statewide (national community, serves WY young adults online)
Stupid Cancer provides the largest peer community for young adults with cancer (ages 15–39). Wyoming young adults — including University of Wyoming students in Laramie and young workers in the energy industry — face cancer diagnoses that intersect with education, early career, and often limited local peer support. Stupid Cancer’s online community and helpline bridge the isolation of a rural cancer diagnosis at a young age.
- Online peer community for ages 15–39
- Cancer helpline: 1-855-STC-HELP
- OMG Cancer Summit
- Social media communities and online groups
Who: Wyoming adults ages 15–39 with cancer
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Disease-Specific Resources
Wyoming Breast Cancer Initiative (WBCI)
📍 Statewide (Cheyenne-based)
The Wyoming Breast Cancer Initiative is a statewide organization focused on breast cancer education, prevention, support, and advocacy. WBCI connects Wyoming women with breast cancer screening resources, peer support, and education. They also advocate for insurance coverage of screening and reconstruction, and maintain connections with the national breast cancer support community on behalf of Wyoming patients.
- Breast cancer support and education statewide
- Connections to peer support programs
- Screening access and advocacy
- Community events and survivor connections
Who: Wyoming women with breast cancer or at elevated breast cancer risk
Cost: Free programs
Phone: 2-1-1
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society – Mountain States Chapter
📍 Statewide (Mountain States chapter serves Wyoming)
LLS Mountain States serves Wyoming blood cancer patients with financial assistance grants (co-pays, travel stipends), free Information Specialist consultations with oncology nurses, First Connection peer mentorship, and clinical trial matching. Wyoming patients traveling to Denver or Salt Lake City for bone marrow transplant or CAR-T therapy can receive LLS travel stipends to offset lodging and fuel costs.
- Financial grants for co-pays and treatment travel
- Information Specialists (free oncology nurse consultations)
- First Connection peer mentorship
- Clinical trial navigation
Who: WY patients with leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma, or MDS
Cost: Free; call 1-800-955-4572
Phone: 2-1-1
Colorectal Cancer Alliance
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
The Colorectal Cancer Alliance offers a nurse navigator helpline, Blue Hope Buddy peer mentorship, and screening cost assistance. Wyoming has significant rural colorectal cancer screening gaps, and CCA’s screening navigation and patient support programs can connect Wyoming patients with resources they may not know exist locally.
- Blue Hope Buddy peer mentor program
- Nurse navigator helpline: 1-877-422-2030
- Screening cost assistance
Who: WY patients with colorectal cancer
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Pancreatic Cancer Action Network (PanCAN)
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
PanCAN’s Patient Services provides free case management, clinical trial matching, and Know Your Tumor molecular profiling for Wyoming pancreatic cancer patients. Given Wyoming’s lack of local specialist expertise in pancreatic cancer, PanCAN navigators are especially valuable in helping patients identify whether Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Colorado, or another center is best matched to their specific tumor biology.
- Free case management and patient services
- Clinical trial finder and enrollment support
- Know Your Tumor molecular profiling
- Survivor network peer mentors
Who: Wyoming patients with pancreatic cancer
Cost: Free; call 1-877-272-6226
Phone: 2-1-1
FORCE – Facing Our Risk of Cancer Empowered
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
FORCE supports individuals with hereditary cancer risk (BRCA1/2, Lynch syndrome, and related mutations). Wyoming patients who receive genetic counseling at Wyoming Medical Center or out-of-state centers can access FORCE’s peer mentors, evidence-based educational resources, and insurance advocacy for preventive surgeries and enhanced screening protocols.
- Peer support for hereditary cancer risk community
- XRAY evidence-based resource review
- Helpline: 1-954-255-8732
- Insurance coverage advocacy
Who: WY patients with BRCA, Lynch syndrome, or other hereditary cancer risk
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
American Lung Association – Mountain Pacific Region
📍 Statewide (Mountain Pacific region)
The American Lung Association’s LUNG FORCE program and Lung Cancer Helpline support Wyoming lung cancer patients with peer community, education, and lung cancer screening navigation. Wyoming’s history in coal and uranium mining creates elevated lung cancer risk in affected communities; the ALA’s screening navigation resources help identify low-dose CT screening access points in Wyoming.
- Lung Cancer Helpline: 1-800-586-4872
- LUNG FORCE peer community
- Lung cancer screening navigation
- Smoking cessation programs
Who: WY patients with lung cancer or at elevated lung cancer risk
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF)
📍 Statewide (national, applies to WY residents)
MMRF provides financial assistance grants, a nurse-staffed helpline, clinical trial matching, and patient education for myeloma patients. Wyoming myeloma patients considering stem cell transplant or CAR-T therapy — procedures not available within Wyoming — can receive MMRF navigator support to identify the right out-of-state center (Huntsman or UCCC) and access travel assistance.
- Myeloma nurse helpline: 1-888-841-6673
- Financial assistance grants
- Clinical trial matching for myeloma
- Patient education and treatment guides
Who: Wyoming patients with multiple myeloma
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming patients face something nearly unique in American healthcare: a realistic likelihood that their most important cancer care will happen in another state. The single most valuable step a newly diagnosed Wyoming cancer patient can take is identifying, early, which out-of-state cancer center will serve as their primary treatment hub — Huntsman Cancer Institute in Salt Lake City for western and central Wyoming, University of Colorado Cancer Center in Aurora for southern Wyoming, Billings Clinic for northern Wyoming — and then arranging transportation, lodging, and financial support around that center before treatment begins. Angel Flight Rocky Mountain, Wyoming Medicaid NEMT (for Medicaid members), and ACS Hope Lodge in Denver are the three most important resources for long-distance treatment logistics. Start those conversations on the day of your diagnosis, not after your first appointment is already scheduled.
Additional Support Resources
American Cancer Society – Wyoming
📍 Cheyenne, WY
ACS provides Road To Recovery rides, Hope Lodge access, and 24/7 navigation for Wyoming cancer patients.
- Road To Recovery rides
- Hope Lodge lodging
- 24/7 helpline
Who: Cancer patients & caregivers
Cost: Free
Phone: (800) 227-2345
CancerCare – Wyoming
📍 Serving all Wyoming counties
Free counseling, support groups, and financial assistance grants for Wyoming cancer patients and their families.
- Professional counseling
- Financial grants
- Online support groups
Who: Cancer patients & families
Cost: Free
Phone: (800) 813-4673
Wyoming 211
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Dial 2-1-1 to find local cancer support, food, transportation, and emergency resources anywhere in Wyoming.
- 24/7 helpline
- Local resource referrals
- Text access available
Who: All Wyoming residents
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Patient Advocate Foundation
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Case management and financial assistance for Wyoming cancer patients navigating complex insurance and treatment costs.
- Case management services
- Co-pay relief fund
- Insurance appeal support
Who: Insured patients with hardship
Cost: Free
Phone: (800) 532-5274
Wyoming Medicaid
📍 Cheyenne, WY
State Medicaid program covering cancer treatment, prescriptions, and medical care for low-income Wyoming residents.
- Cancer treatment coverage
- Prescription benefits
- Cancer screening coverage
Who: Low-income Wyoming residents
Cost: Low/no cost
Phone: (307) 777-7531
Food Bank of Wyoming
📍 Casper, WY
Statewide food bank providing food distributions through 170+ partner agencies for Wyoming cancer patients.
- Statewide food distribution
- Mobile pantry program
- Nutrition programs
Who: Food-insecure Wyoming residents
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 265-2172
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society – Mountain Pacific
📍 Serving Wyoming
LLS provides co-pay assistance, patient navigation, and blood cancer support for Wyoming patients.
- Co-pay assistance
- Patient navigation
- Support group referrals
Who: Blood cancer patients
Cost: Free services
Phone: (800) 955-4572
HealthWell Foundation
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Grants covering premiums, co-pays, and deductibles for underinsured Wyoming cancer patients.
- Premium assistance grants
- Co-pay support
- Deductible assistance
Who: Underinsured patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: (800) 675-8416
PAN Foundation – Wyoming
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Disease-specific financial assistance for cancer treatment costs and insurance premiums for Wyoming residents.
- Disease-specific grants
- Premium assistance
- Medication cost help
Who: Underinsured cancer patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: (866) 316-7263
NeedyMeds – Wyoming Drug Assistance
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Database of patient assistance programs and drug discount cards for Wyoming cancer patients needing medication help.
- Drug PAP listings
- Discount drug card
- Diagnosis-based programs
Who: Uninsured/underinsured patients
Cost: Free
Phone: (800) 503-6897
Cleaning for a Reason – Wyoming
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Free professional home cleaning for Wyoming cancer patients undergoing active treatment.
- 2 free cleanings per treatment
- Certified local cleaners
- Simple application process
Who: Cancer patients in treatment
Cost: Free
Phone: (877) 337-3348
Joe’s House – Wyoming Lodging
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Online guide to discounted lodging near Denver, Salt Lake City, and Billings cancer centers for Wyoming patients.
- Discounted hotel listings
- Near UCHealth/University of Colorado
- Near Billings Clinic
Who: Patients traveling for treatment
Cost: Discounted rates
Phone: (877) 563-7468
Air Charity Network – Wyoming
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Free air transportation coordination for Wyoming cancer patients traveling to specialized out-of-state treatment centers.
- Free flights to treatment
- Volunteer pilot network
- Long-distance coordination
Who: Patients needing air travel
Cost: Free
Phone: (877) 621-7177
4th Angel Mentoring – Wyoming
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Telephone peer mentoring for Wyoming cancer patients matched with trained cancer survivor volunteers.
- Phone-based mentoring
- Diagnosis-matched mentors
- Caregiver mentor program
Who: Cancer patients & caregivers
Cost: Free
Phone: (866) 520-3197
Livestrong at the YMCA – Wyoming
📍 Casper YMCA, WY
Free 12-week cancer wellness and fitness program for adult survivors at the Casper Family YMCA.
- 12-week fitness program
- Certified cancer trainers
- Peer support community
Who: Adult cancer survivors
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 235-0181
Wyoming Cancer Program
📍 Cheyenne, WY
State cancer program providing free screenings, early detection outreach, and patient navigation across Wyoming.
- Free breast/cervical screening
- Colorectal screening
- Patient navigation
Who: Uninsured/low-income Wyomingites
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 777-6015
Ivinson Memorial Hospital – Cancer Center
📍 Laramie, WY
Comprehensive cancer services for southeast Wyoming including oncology, infusion, and care coordination in Laramie.
- Medical oncology
- Infusion services
- Care coordination
Who: Southeast Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 742-2141
Wyoming Medical Center – Cancer
📍 Casper, WY
Wyoming’s largest hospital cancer program offering oncology, radiation therapy, and survivorship services in Casper.
- Radiation & medical oncology
- Survivorship clinic
- Patient navigation
Who: Central Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 577-7201
Cheyenne VA Medical Center – Oncology
📍 Cheyenne, WY
VA cancer care services for Wyoming veterans at the Cheyenne VAMC, including oncology and benefits coordination.
- VA oncology services
- Veteran benefits counseling
- Telehealth oncology
Who: Wyoming veterans with cancer
Cost: VA covered
Phone: (307) 778-7550
Feeding America – Wyoming Regional
📍 Casper, WY
Food assistance network serving rural Wyoming cancer patients through food banks and community pantry partnerships.
- Food pantry network
- Rural mobile distributions
- Hunger relief programs
Who: Food-insecure Wyoming residents
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 265-2172
Wyoming Legal Aid
📍 Casper & Cheyenne, WY
Free legal services for low-income Wyoming cancer patients facing insurance denial, disability, or housing crises.
- Insurance appeal help
- Disability benefits advocacy
- Housing legal rights
Who: Low-income Wyoming residents
Cost: Free
Phone: (800) 442-6170
Wyoming Coalition for the Homeless
📍 Casper, WY
Housing assistance and emergency shelter for Wyoming cancer patients experiencing homelessness or housing instability.
- Emergency shelter referrals
- Rental assistance
- Housing case management
Who: Homeless/at-risk Wyoming residents
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 473-8950
Wyoming Association of Mental Health Centers
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Mental health counseling and crisis services for cancer patients and caregivers across Wyoming’s rural counties.
- Individual counseling
- Crisis intervention
- Telehealth therapy
Who: Cancer patients & caregivers
Cost: Sliding scale
Phone: (307) 632-1559
Wind River Cancer Foundation
📍 Riverton, WY
Local foundation providing financial assistance and support for cancer patients in the Wind River Valley area.
- Patient financial grants
- Fremont County support
- Local transportation help
Who: Wind River Valley cancer patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: (307) 856-0000
Wyoming Dept of Health – Prescription Assist
📍 Cheyenne, WY
State assistance program connecting Wyoming residents with free and low-cost cancer drug programs.
- Drug PAP referrals
- State pharmaceutical programs
- Generic drug access
Who: Uninsured/underinsured Wyomingites
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 777-6015
Rocky Mountain Oncology – Casper
📍 Casper, WY
Independent oncology practice serving central Wyoming with personalized cancer care and infusion therapy.
- Medical oncology
- Infusion therapy
- Second opinion consultations
Who: Central Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 234-6666
Teton Cancer Institute – Jackson
📍 Jackson, WY
Comprehensive cancer care for Teton County residents, offering oncology and infusion services in northwest Wyoming.
- Medical oncology
- Infusion services
- Patient navigation
Who: Northwest Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 734-9888
Meals on Wheels Wyoming
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Home-delivered meals for homebound cancer patients in Wyoming, supporting nutrition during treatment.
- Home meal delivery
- Nutrition-focused menus
- Wellness check visits
Who: Homebound adults with cancer
Cost: Free/low cost
Phone: (307) 638-1946
Wyoming Aging Division – Cancer Support
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Statewide aging services including transportation, nutrition, and care coordination for older Wyoming cancer patients.
- Transportation assistance
- Congregate meals
- Care coordination
Who: Adults 60+ with cancer
Cost: Free/suggested donation
Phone: (307) 777-7986
Wyoming Community Foundation – Cancer Aid
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Local grants supporting cancer patient assistance programs and survivorship initiatives across Wyoming communities.
- Patient assistance grants
- Survivorship program funding
- Community health grants
Who: Wyoming cancer nonprofits & patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: (307) 721-8300
Hospice of Laramie County
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Hospice and palliative care for terminal cancer patients in Laramie County, providing comfort and family support.
- Home-based hospice
- Inpatient respite care
- Grief counseling
Who: Terminal cancer patients & families
Cost: Medicare/Medicaid covered
Phone: (307) 635-0177
Volunteers of America – Wyoming
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Emergency services, housing assistance, and transitional support for cancer patients in financial distress in Wyoming.
- Emergency financial aid
- Housing assistance
- Transitional support
Who: Wyoming residents in crisis
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 634-9484
Wyoming Catholic Charities
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Emergency financial assistance, food resources, and counseling for cancer patients across Wyoming communities.
- Emergency financial help
- Food pantry access
- Counseling services
Who: Wyoming residents in need
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 638-1530
Wyoming Oncology Foundation
📍 Casper, WY
Statewide foundation providing financial grants and support services for Wyoming cancer patients and their families.
- Patient financial grants
- Caregiver support
- Resource navigation
Who: Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: (307) 577-7201
Sheridan Memorial Hospital – Cancer
📍 Sheridan, WY
Cancer care services in northern Wyoming including oncology, infusion, and patient navigation at Sheridan Memorial.
- Medical oncology
- Infusion therapy
- Patient navigation
Who: Northern Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 672-1000
Campbell County Health Oncology
📍 Gillette, WY
Oncology and infusion services for northeastern Wyoming cancer patients at Campbell County Memorial Hospital.
- Medical oncology clinic
- Infusion center
- Case management
Who: Northeast Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 688-1000
Wyoming Respite Coalition
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Coordinates respite care relief for family caregivers of cancer patients across Wyoming’s rural and frontier counties.
- Respite care coordination
- Caregiver relief services
- Emergency backup care
Who: Family caregivers
Cost: Free/income-based
Phone: (307) 777-7986
St. John’s Medical Center Cancer
📍 Jackson, WY
Cancer care services in Teton County including oncology consultations, infusion, and care coordination.
- Oncology consultation
- Infusion services
- Telehealth follow-up
Who: Teton County cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 733-3636
Big Horn Basin Cancer Coalition
📍 Cody, WY
Local advocacy and resource coordination for cancer patients in the Big Horn Basin region of northwest Wyoming.
- Local resource coordination
- Patient advocacy
- Educational outreach
Who: Big Horn Basin cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Disability Rights
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Free legal advocacy for Wyoming cancer patients with disabilities, covering employment, housing, and benefits rights.
- Disability rights legal aid
- Employment discrimination
- Benefits appeals
Who: Cancer patients with disabilities
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 632-3496
Saratoga Lake Lodge – Cancer Retreat
📍 Saratoga, WY
Retreat program offering restorative stays for cancer patients and survivors in the natural beauty of Platte Valley, Wyoming.
- Cancer wellness retreats
- Nature therapy programs
- Caregiver respite stays
Who: Cancer patients & caregivers
Cost: Free/subsidized
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming SNAP Food Benefits
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Monthly food assistance for low-income Wyoming cancer patients through the federal nutrition program.
- Monthly grocery benefits
- Simple online application
- SNAP outreach workers
Who: Low-income Wyoming households
Cost: Free benefits
Phone: (307) 777-6312
National Children’s Cancer Society – Wyoming
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Financial and emotional support for Wyoming families with children undergoing cancer treatment.
- Family financial grants
- Emotional support resources
- Lodging assistance
Who: Families with children with cancer
Cost: Free grants
Phone: (800) 532-6459
Sweetwater County Cancer Support
📍 Rock Springs, WY
Local cancer support services and patient assistance for residents of Sweetwater County in southwest Wyoming.
- Local patient assistance
- Support group coordination
- Resource navigation
Who: Sweetwater County cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Institute for Disabilities – Cancer
📍 Laramie, WY
Support services and resource coordination for cancer patients with disabilities at the University of Wyoming.
- Disability resource coordination
- Benefits counseling
- Assistive technology help
Who: Cancer patients with disabilities
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 766-2761
Platte Valley Medical Center – Cancer
📍 Wheatland, WY
Rural cancer care and oncology consultation services for Platte County and eastern Wyoming patients.
- Oncology consultation
- Infusion referrals
- Care coordination
Who: Eastern Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/sliding scale
Phone: (307) 322-3636
Cancer Care Connection – Wyoming
📍 Casper, WY
Local patient navigation and resource linkage for Wyoming cancer patients at Cancer Care Connection.
- Patient navigation
- Resource linkage
- Peer support programs
Who: Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 577-4545
Wyoming Mental Health Coalition
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Advocacy and resource referrals for cancer patients experiencing depression, anxiety, and mental health challenges.
- Mental health advocacy
- Therapist referrals
- Support group network
Who: Cancer patients & caregivers
Cost: Free referrals
Phone: (307) 632-9011
4th Angel Wyoming – Caregiver Mentoring
📍 National – serves Wyoming
Caregiver peer mentoring for Wyoming family members supporting loved ones through cancer treatment.
- Caregiver phone mentoring
- Experienced caregiver matches
- Emotional support tools
Who: Cancer caregivers
Cost: Free
Phone: (866) 520-3197
Wyoming Breast Cancer Initiative
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Advocacy, education, and early detection outreach for breast cancer patients and survivors across Wyoming.
- Early detection outreach
- Survivor support programs
- Policy advocacy
Who: Breast cancer patients & survivors
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 777-6824
Tongue River Valley Community Center
📍 Dayton, WY
Rural community center providing food, social services, and support referrals for cancer patients in northern Sheridan County.
- Food assistance
- Social service referrals
- Rural community support
Who: Rural northern Wyoming residents
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 655-9016
Wyoming Telehealth Network – Oncology
📍 Statewide Wyoming
Telehealth oncology consultations connecting rural Wyoming patients with specialist cancer care remotely.
- Remote oncology consultation
- Telehealth follow-up
- Specialist access for rural areas
Who: Rural Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Insurance/low cost
Phone: (307) 777-3597
Community Entry Services – Wyoming
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Personal care, independent living support, and respite services for cancer patients with significant disabilities.
- Personal care assistance
- Independent living support
- Respite coordination
Who: Cancer patients with disabilities
Cost: Medicaid/income-based
Phone: (307) 638-6000
Wyoming Home Health Network
📍 Casper, WY
Home health nursing and aide services for cancer patients recovering at home throughout Wyoming.
- Home nursing visits
- Wound care
- Medication management
Who: Cancer patients at home
Cost: Medicare/Medicaid covered
Phone: (307) 577-4040
Hope for Highlands – Wyoming Cancer Aid
📍 Thermopolis, WY
Local charitable organization providing emergency financial help for cancer patients in Hot Springs County.
- Emergency financial aid
- Local resource coordination
- Hot Springs County coverage
Who: Hot Springs County cancer patients
Cost: Free grants
Phone: 2-1-1
Fremont County Cancer Resources
📍 Riverton, WY
Resource coordination and patient advocacy for cancer patients in Fremont County and the surrounding Wind River area.
- Local resource coordination
- Patient advocacy
- Support group referrals
Who: Fremont County cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Wyoming Oncology Social Work Services
📍 Casper & Cheyenne, WY
Oncology social workers at Wyoming Medical Center and Cheyenne Regional help patients access community resources.
- Social work support
- Community resource linkage
- Financial navigation
Who: Wyoming cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: (307) 633-7000
Wyoming Division of Vocational Rehabilitation
📍 Cheyenne, WY
Job training, retraining, and workplace accommodation support for Wyoming cancer patients and survivors.
- Vocational rehabilitation
- Job skills training
- Workplace accommodation
Who: Cancer patients & survivors
Cost: Free/income-based
Phone: (307) 777-8650
Wyoming Oncology Peer Support Network
📍 Casper, WY
Peer support network connecting Wyoming cancer patients with trained survivor volunteers for emotional encouragement.
- Peer support matching
- Survivor volunteer network
- Online and phone support
Who: Cancer patients & survivors
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1
Carbon County Cancer Coalition
📍 Rawlins, WY
Local cancer support and resource coordination for patients in Carbon County and rural south-central Wyoming.
- Local resource coordination
- Patient advocacy
- Educational outreach
Who: Carbon County cancer patients
Cost: Free
Phone: 2-1-1