Monday, October 2, 2017

Race for the Cure



Scripture of the Day:
1st Peter 2:24
Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the hill, that we being dead to sins, should live by righteousness; by whose stripes ye are healed.


Race for the Cure

October is Breast Cancer Month. It is the time to make people aware of Breast Cancer and encourage mammograms and giving for research. I know that some don't like Susan G. Koman Foundation, but they do good work in research. They are not the only ones that do the research. The American Cancer Society also is great. They have the Relay for Life. But this month it is Race for the Cure. You can find a race in your area by Googling "Race for the Cure". This is the race if Va. Beach this year. 

Komen Tidewater Race for the Cure®


Saturday, October 14, 2017
Virginia Beach, VA
Tidewater Affiliate
(757) 490-7794
office@komentidewater.org

Here's one in Ohio:

Komen Athens Race for the Cure®


Sunday, October 15, 2017
Athens, OH
Columbus Affiliate
(614) 297-8155
info@komencolumbus.org


I've done these races and my family came and did it with me. It was lots of fun. 


If you don't live in the United States, you can still find a race where you live. The following link is for International Races:


One in 8 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime. Please find a Race for the Cure. I don't want one of those 8 women to be my mother, daughter, daughter-in-law, or granddaughters. Or any of my family members or friends. But if it does, I want a cure to be found for them so that they don't have to go through what I did. 

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with his healing touch. I know He loves you.

Friday, September 29, 2017

How Do I Get Help?

Scripture of the Day:

Luke 9:1 (NLT)


            One day Jesus called together his twelve disciples and gave them power and authority over all demons and to heal all diseases.




How do I get Help?

I was very fortunate when I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I am a Navy dependent and they covered everything. I also carried and extra insurance policy that paid me, not my doctors. As a smoker, I fully expected to have problems with my lungs. I never dreamed the cancer would be breast cancer.

There are a lot of costs that patients incur to fight this disease or any cancer. You'll need to pay for your hospital or clinic visits. There is all the testing. In the first month before my mastectomy, I went to the doctor for consultations and testing 16 times. You'll have to pay for surgery if you choose that direction and the medicines that inevitably go with it. There are procedures such as having the implants or getting the nipple tattoos. You'll need to pay all of the doctors and any home health service that you may need depending on the severity of you cancer. How will you pay for all of this?

I googled "Help from the American Cancer Society". I came up with an article that was in my opinion very helpful. It talked about social workers that could guide you through the process and how to find one. It discussed housing, caregivers, regular household bills, travel, food, internet access and other expenses. I was actually surprised to find that they help with so much. I'm sure you have to go through some kind of process to again access to the assistance. But if you need help, the help is out there. The link to this particular website is as follows:


It is not the only article out there. 

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you. 

Thursday, August 17, 2017

Chemo Brain

Scripture of the Day:

Luke 8:43-48 (NLT)

            A woman in the crowd had suffered for twelve years with constant bleeding, and she could find no cure. Coming up behind Jesus, she touched the fringe of his robe.  Immediately the bleeding stopped. “Who touched me” Jesus asked. Everyone denied it and Peter said, Master, this whole crowd is pressing against you. But Jesus said, “Someone deliberately touched me, for I felt healing power go out from me.” When the woman realized that she could stay hidden, she began to tremble and fell to her knees in front of him. The whole crowd heard her explain why she had touched him and that she had been immediately healed. "Daughter." He said to her, "Your faith has made you well, Go in peace."



Chemo Brain

It's been 5- 51/2 years since I've had chemo-therapy unless you include the letrozole that I had to take for 5 years. It's barely been a year since I last too that one. 

I find myself having trouble sometimes trying to remember the most simple thing. For example. I have a friend who just lost her husband of 36 years. I mentioned that I remember going to her wedding. She told me I was in it!!! Now how do you forget that?! I am getting up in years so I'm afraid of all the "old folks" problems. But I had a doctor friend tell me about Chemo Brain. 

I found an article about Chemo Brain. It said, "The sometimes vague yet distressing mental changes cancer patients notice are real, not imagined. They might last a short time, or they might go on for years. These changes can make people unable to go back to their school, work, or social activities, or make it so that it takes a lot of mental effort to do so. Chemo brain affects everyday life for many people with cancer."

I took this statement from the following link.


It gives a definition for Chemo Brain, what causes it and what you can do about it. It does not give me the impression that the condition will go away. It does say to tell others. I haven't really done that. I will now. I've seen some look at me, like, why doesn't she remember that. It's very frustrating. 

Please read the article if you or someone you know is having trouble remembering little things. Frankly, I'd rather have Chemo Brain than Alzheimer's disease. The one article I read didn't imply that it will get worse. It just is. The were a lot of articles out there and I just chose the first one. If you want to do the research, this article can just be a start.

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you. 



Thursday, June 8, 2017

Killer Cells Take Out Tumors

Scripture of the Day:

Those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.
Isaiah 40:31


The following is just a short article that I found interesting and encouraging. It lifts me up that the work to cure this disease is endless and ongoing. I've read several articles that say the results are encouraging and that is always good news. The link to this article is at the end.

How killer cells take out tumors

June 2, 2017 by Fabio Bergamin
How killer cells take out tumours
Cancer immunotherapy under the microscope: In the center of the image, three killer cells (violet, smaller) attack a cancer cell (violet, larger; leukemia cells are shown here). Credit: Schliemann et al.: Cancer Immunol Res 2015, 3: 547
The use of immunotherapy to treat cancer is celebrating its first successes – but there are still many knowledge gaps in the underlying mechanisms of action. In a study of mice with soft tissue tumors, ETH researchers have now shown how endogenous killer cells track down the tumors with the help of dormant viruses.
The promising drug is known as F8-TNF. When injected into the bloodstream, it lures  from the body's immune system towards sarcomas. The killer  then destroy the tumors. Researchers from ETH Zurich, led by Professor Dario Neri at the Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, developed F8-TNF four years ago. Since then, they have been able to show that it can completely cure sarcomas in mice when combined with a chemotherapeutic agent. Such an effective treatment cannot be achieved by chemotherapy alone or with other therapeutic approaches. Now, a drug closely related to F8-TNF is being tested as part of  in humans.
Consisting of two sub-units, the F8-TNF molecule works rather like a store detective: just as a detective tracks down a shoplifter and detains it until the police arrive, the molecule identifies  cells using its F8 sub-unit and then uses its TNF part to lure killer cells (cytotoxic T cells). TNF is an immune system messenger.
Implanted into the genome
Much of the molecule's mechanism of action was hitherto unclear, but the scientists in Neri's group have now succeeded in working it out. They wanted to find out how the killer cells recognize the  after they are lured to it. Although the messenger TNF alerts the killer cells to the tumor's presence, it does not provide them with a specific tumor identifier.
The scientists discovered that the killer cells called by F8-TNF are guided by proteins from specific dormant viruses (endogenous retroviruses). The genetic blueprint of these viruses has implanted itself into the mouse genome during evolution. In many cancer cells, the viral proteins are brought to life. Fragments of these retroviral proteins on the surface of  allow the killer cells to distinguish  from .

IF you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

How Do Cells Become Cancerous?


Scripture of the Day:

Luke 9:1 (NLT)
            One day Jesus called together his twelve disciples and gave them power and authority over all demons and to heal all diseases.



I have often wondered if I could have avoided the breast cancer diagnosis. I've read several thing about what causes cancer. Some I believe maybe and others I just can't agree that it is possible. The one I have heard most often is smoking and drinking alcohol. This article supports this again. According to this article there are two ways a cell can change it's DNA. This is the first time that I have read that smoking or drinking can affect your DNA. This article does combine your habits with your environment. 

This website is actually a place to ask questions and the question about how a cell becomes cancerous was sent in by Patrick (last name unknown). If you have different questions about cancer, this may be the site to visit:

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you.

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Testing for Breast Cancer with your tears


Scripture of the Day:

            Therefore know this day and consider it in y our heart, that the Lord Himself is God in heaven above and the earth beneath, there is no other.
Deuteronomy 4:39




I think this is very cool. They created a test for breast cancer using your tears. "The tears are kind of a reflection of the blood, " Harms said. "Most people have difficulty drawing their own blood but tears are very accessible to people. (Dr. Steven Harms). This is such an incredible idea. It sounds so much easier to be tested. I don't know if you've ever been through this, but the testing alone back when I was diagnosed was exhausting and sometimes painful.

"Mammography has very large false positive rates," Omid Moghadam, CEO of Ascendent DX said. "it is complicated. You have to use imaging tests and it is something have to go to a center for."  

We all know how painful mammograms can be. I've been told that many radiologists don't even push the pain because of the discomfort of the patient. I was told that often it is missed because they don't want to put the patient in pain. Back then, I said give me the pain. I want correct answers. But now, when the test becomes available, you'll be able to go to your doctor's office. Can you imagine. This article says that it is also reasonably priced to produce. I think this is great.

The link for this article is:
There is also video included that shows you how this work. It is very interesting.

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with his healing touch. I know He loves you.






Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Targeting Cancer Spread

Scripture of the Day:


            One day Jesus called together his twelve disciples and gave them power and authority over all demons and to heal all diseases.
Luke 9:1 (NLT)



Targeting cancer spread: keeping tumours under LOX and key

April 18, 2017 

This article popped up on one of my social media sites and I went to look at it. I found it very interesting. It said that finding molecules that help cancers progress and developing ways to disable them is crucial in tackling advanced tumours. This makes sense to me as a possibility to if not a cure, a deterrent to spreading as the title implies. LOX is short for the name of such a molecule that they want to disable. It talks about how this molecule can open us up for the spreading of cancer and the block that they have found to prevent this. It is a very interesting read, if  you want some encouraging articles to read.

Targeting Cancer Spread This is the link to the article by Justine Alfred

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know he loves you. 

Friday, April 14, 2017

Can Cancer Be Killed?


Quote of the Day:
When you come to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on.” – Franklin D. Roosevelt


Can Caner Be Killed?

I just found this article. It says that cancer can be killed. Can it be true? The article is by a family who the wife had cancer in her bladder. I wonder if this discovery/possibility would work for all cancers. According to the article, cancer thrives on sugar. So the wife was given a complete diet change and all refined sugar was removed.

Second, cancer cannot survive in a temperature exceeding 105 degrees Fahrenheit, according to this article. So some sort of machine was used to direct heat specifically to the cancer cells. This actually sounds to me like the radiation treatment only using heat.

There were a couple more things that were done to treat the wife. This was done in Frankfurt, Germany. In the article the husband questions the medical practice of the United States.  I can't help but wonder if he's right. 

Please if some form of cancer effects you, please read this article. Maybe you could ask questions of your doctor. It's rather too late for me. My surgery and chemo-therapy is done. 

I have to say that I feel confident that my treatment did the trick. But the alternatives sound wonderful.  The following is the link to the article.

So Cancer Can Be Killed by Jeff Witzeman

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you. 

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Cancer Free for 6 Years

Quote of the Day:
“Cancer can take away all of my physical abilities. It cannot touch my mind, it cannot touch my heart, and it cannot touch my soul.” – Jim Valvano


Cancer Free for 6 Years

I had my double mastectomy 6 years ago Tuesday, March 28, 2017. Am I thankful? Yes. Did I celebrate all day? No. This is always a day of reflection for me. I remember that surgery like it was yesterday. After all is said and done, I still wish I hadn't had to go through it. 

Don't get me wrong. I am truly grateful to be alive and able to enjoy my husband, children and grandchildren.  But I want to let other survivors know that it ok to still be angry and scared that it could happen again. Cancer took from me that "it can't happen to me" syndrome. I have no problem with that except that now anytime there is a question mark, I know that it CAN happen to me. 

So yes, after 6 years I still have my moments of being afraid, I still have my moments of realizing how much things have changed.  But yes, I still celebrate that I'm here to have these discussions with God. I'm here to watch the power of prayer work in others that are going through the same thing. I'm here to hopefully be a role model for those who are going through a weak moment. If I can do it, so can you. 

Please add those on my prayer page to you pray list or chain. If there is someone that you would like me to add, please let me know

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

So You Don't Have Insurance

Scripture of the Day:


            Heal me, O Lord, and I will be healed; save me, and I will be saved.

Jeremiah 17:14


I was asked today about how to get a free mammogram. My friend's child has a 17 year old friend that has found a lump. She is not from a wealthy family and has no insurance. I was able to share 3 possibilities of where to go for a free mammogram. I really hope they help. 

The first is the American Breast Cancer Foundation. ABCF.ORG When I went to this site you have to choices. You can donate or ask for assistance. Please consider donating so young people like this young lady can get what she needs. 

The next one is the CDC - Center of Disease Control. There I found a place to look for free mammograms in your state. 
CDC

This gave me the idea to not only look in my own state but my own area. So in Google I put in free mammogram Norfolk, Va. I found this link, EVMS. EVMS is a local hospital involved in training and research. 

If you know someone that could use this information, please share. It could mean the difference between life and death. 

Please add this young lady to your prayer list. God knows who she is. 
If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with his healing touch. I know He loves you.

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

There's An App For That


Scripture of the Day: 

Isaiah 58: 8
Then shall thy light break forth as the morning and thy health shall spring for the speedily: and thy righteousness shall go before thee, and the glory of the Lord shall be thy reward. 



I was posting on my Facebook page, encouraging my friends and family to schedule their mammogram and do the self-check. So I went to google to find a site explaining exactly how to do those self checks. I discovered that there is an app for that. It tells you how to do the self exams and reminds you to do it. For those who live by their phones, this is perfect for you.


I'd like to send out a special request for my friend Glenna. She is going through a rough time right now. Please pray for her and lift her up as well as all the others on my prayer list page. Thank you.

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with his healing touch. I know He loves you.



Thursday, February 23, 2017

Celebrating Birthdays

Scripture of the Day:

Give them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.
Isaiah 6:1-3



Celebrating Birthdays

I recently celebrated my 64th birthday. But I look at it as celebrating my 6th birthday as a survivor. I have to say that some of those birthdays I actually felt like celebrating and some I found depressing. I don't want to minimize anyone's progress, but I'd like those who haven't gotten this far that you still have a ways to go. On those tough days, it's just that if I had my 'drathers, I'd rather this had never happened. 

Can you have those bad days? Sure you can. It just happens. I don't seem to have complete control sometimes. But it doesn't last, at least, not for me. 

So keep the faith and go out and celebrate that day and be thankful that you get to celebrate another one. ..even if it's not the greatest one you ever celebrated.

I found the article below that lets you know that all of our birthdays take on a new meaning.  And congratulations for being able to celebrate another.

The link to this article is below and you can go to it if you want to research the topic a little more.  



On the Meaning of Birthdays to a Cancer Survivor (aka “My first 49th?”)

When I was growing up, birthdays were always of tremendous significance in my family.  My sister and I both looked forward to our own special days all year: we loved the presents, the attention, the parties, everything about it.  But maybe most of all, we loved the excitement of finally seeing the theme my mother chose for our birthday cakes.  She always made complex cakes of her own special design, and she outdid herself every year.  We still talk about the most memorable one: the “Bucky Dent” cake, designed to look like my sister’s large blue, buck-toothed stuffed rabbit that she’d named in honor of the (very!) handsome Yankee short stop.  As a kid, I also loved that my birthday came just a few days before Halloween.  I was a painfully shy little girl, but I loved dressing up to be someone (or something) else, the spookiness of it all, seeing all the other kids’ costumes in the neighborhood, and eating far too much candy for several days.
But I figured that when I “grew up,” birthdays would become just another day.  And that’s definitely the case for my husband.  As one of 9 kids in an Irish-Catholic family, his parents (understandably!) didn’t have the time or energy for big birthday celebrations, particularly by the time Marty arrived (the 8th child and youngest boy).  He does reminisce about how his mother would let the kids choose their favorite meals for their birthday dinners and how that was always such a treat.  But now he encourages me NOT to get him anything for his birthday (I don’t listen) and, last year for his 50th, NOT to do anything, let alone anything special (I didn’t listen).  And just this week, when I asked if he minded that I’d be attending a grant review panel on the day of his birthday, he started laughing … “Oh my God, Deb: I’d be absolutely devastated! “Nuf said. ðŸ™‚
But the fact is that every year when the calendar reaches October 27th again, I take time to reflect–and to appreciate just how fortunate I am to BE here.  Most young adults still have at least a residual sense of invulnerability that’s hung on from childhood and adolescence:  from simply not understanding the concept of death to not being able to comprehend one’s own death, a feeling that death “can’t happen to me.”  Yet at the age of 22 years, I lost my sense of invulnerability for a lifetime.  It literally was a black-and-white moment, during which my childhood doctor and I were looking at my chest x-ray, showing one lung that appeared black (as it should have) and the other covered entirely in a frosty white.  The cause, stage III Hodgkin’s lymphoma–a diagnosis that if received just a decade before may very well have meant that I wouldn’t be celebrating many more birthdays.
And on Halloween night this year, my memories returned of another moment that similarly divided time for me.  Exactly 10 years ago, 4 days after my 39th birthday, I learned that I was facing the real possibility of not being here to celebrate my 40th.  On that Halloween day in 2003, I was walking up the stairs to my new cardiologist’s office, fighting the pain gripping my chest and stopping every few seconds to catch my breath. Once I reached the office, I carefully settled myself into a chair in the waiting room and watched in a daze as members of the office staff went about their business, all while dressed in Halloween costumes.  Normally, I would have gotten a kick out of that.  But not on that day.  I was still trying to catch my breath when the technician who had performed my cardiac testing walked right over to me, put her hand on my shoulder, leaned over, and asked if I was okay.  She then clasped my arm warmly, smiled, and went to her next patient. She was in costume as well, a frightening one actually, but the fact that she obviously recognized my fear, comforted me, yet didn’t say, “don’t worry; everything is going to be fine”–that was one of the scariest moments of my life. And it wasn’t fine.  Instead, I learned that I had 90% blockage of one of my coronary arteries.  The cause: scarring and narrowing caused by my radiation treatment for lymphoma several years before.  And, as I’ve written about previously, because of the location of the blockage, I faced a terrifying decision–whether to proceed with an angioplasty, which presented the risk of another coronary artery collapsing and a heart attack during the procedure, or whether to go right to open-heart surgery for a coronary artery bypass graft.  When I later found myself asking the cardiologist whether I should be thinking about “getting my affairs in order,” I was shocked on so many levels: that I was actually asking this question, how truly surreal the situation was, and worst of all, to hear that the answer was “Yes.”
As a young adult cancer survivor (AYA), I know that the reality is a stark one for far too many of us.  According to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), unlike overall improvements seen with older adults and younger children, the survival rates for young adults with cancer have not improved in nearly 30 years. The lack of improved outcomes can be due to a number of factors, including delayed diagnosis (since many MDs may rarely consider the diagnosis of cancer in a young adult), lack of health insurance and limited access to medical care, receipt of treatment that may not be most effective for their cancers due to limited understanding of the biology and etiology of cancers in AYAs, and the unique supportive and psychosocial care needs that come with such a diagnosis at the juncture between adolescence and adulthood.  And of course, there’s the fact that AYAs face a substantial risk of developing serious late effects of their cancer treatment, including cardiotoxicity and second primary cancers–which, in my case, includes my breast cancer diagnosis at the age of 42 years, also thought to be secondary to my radiation).
So coming full circle, although it may seem childish, I treasure my birthdays because I’ve been given the gift of still being here.  This year’s was my 49th–and next year, I won’t be describing it as my “second” 49th.  I’ll be thrilled that I’m here for 50 and for every day before and after.
Meaning of Birthdays to a Cancer Survivor

Please add those on my prayer list page to your prayer list. If there is someone that you would like me to add, please let me know and I will do so.

If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves you.

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Tumor Markers


Scripture of the Day:

1 Corinthians 5:8
“We are confident, yes, well pleased rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord.” 




What are Tumor Markers

I've been trotting right along in my breast cancer recovery, hitting all the mile-markers I'm supposed to be hitting without any setbacks until last October. Every 6 months, up until that point, I saw my oncologist. In each appointment, blood was taken to be tested for I don't know what. 

But last October, I received a call the next day from my oncologist and she said that some markers in my blood test was pretty high. So I went back in and was retested.  She said they were still pretty high, but that we'd just keep an eye on them and could I come back in a few months...like I was going to say no!! She explained that the specific thing that was high were my tumor markers. She gave me some information, but we were on the phone, so we didn't talk long. So I looked it up.

What I found indicates that the tumor markers will tell you if there is a possibility of cancerous cells in your body. So I was pretty nervous. I did speak with my breast surgeon at one of his checkups and he said that it may have to do with my ovaries. 

All my appointments seem to fall together at approximately the same time. So my next appointment was with my OB=Gyn. She did a blood test for ovarian cancer and ruled it out. But I'm still pretty nervous.

Well, Monday, I had the test with my oncologist redone and it came back normal. What a relief! So, I have now graduated to once a year visits to see her. 

I want to share the following article about tumor markers. This will be excerpts. If you want to read the whole thing, the link will be at the end of the page. 

What are tumor markers?

Tumor markers are substances that are produced by cancer or by other cells of the body in response to cancer or certain benign (noncancerous) conditions. Most tumor markers are made by normal cells as well as by cancer cells; however, they are produced at much higher levels in cancerous conditions. These substances can be found in the blood, urine, stool, tumor tissue, or other tissues or bodily fluids of some patients with cancer. Most tumor markers are proteins. However, more recently, patterns of gene expression and changes to DNA have also begun to be used as tumor markers.
Many different tumor markers have been characterized and are in clinical use. Some are associated with only one type of cancer, whereas others are associated with two or more cancer types. No “universal” tumor marker that can detect any type of cancer has been found.
There are some limitations to the use of tumor markers. Sometimes, noncancerous conditions can cause the levels of certain tumor markers to increase. In addition, not everyone with a particular type of cancer will have a higher level of a tumor marker associated with that cancer. Moreover, tumor markers have not been identified for every type of cancer.

How are tumor markers used in cancer care?

Tumor markers are used to help detect, diagnose, and manage some types of cancer. Although an elevated level of a tumor marker may suggest the presence of cancer, this alone is not enough to diagnose cancer. Therefore, measurements of tumor markers are usually combined with other tests, such as biopsies, to diagnose cancer.
Tumor marker levels may be measured before treatment to help doctors plan the appropriate therapy. In some types of cancer, the level of a tumor marker reflects the stage (extent) of the disease and/or the patient’s prognosis (likely outcome or course of disease). More information about cancer staging is available on the Staging page.
Tumor markers may also be measured periodically during cancer therapy. A decrease in the level of a tumor marker or a return to the marker’s normal level may indicate that the cancer is responding to treatment, whereas no change or an increase may indicate that the cancer is not responding.
Tumor markers may also be measured after treatment has ended to check for recurrence (the return of cancer).

How are tumor markers measured? 

A doctor takes a sample of tumor tissue or bodily fluid and sends it to a laboratory, where various methods are used to measure the level of the tumor marker.
If the tumor marker is being used to determine whether treatment is working or whether there is a recurrence, the marker’s level will be measured in multiple samples taken over time. Usually these “serial measurements,” which show whether the level of a marker is increasing, staying the same, or decreasing, are more meaningful than a single measurement.
...Can tumor markers be used in cancer screening? 
Because tumor markers can be used to assess the response of a tumor to treatment and for prognosis, researchers have hoped that they might also be useful in screening tests that aim to detect cancer early, before there are any symptoms. For a screening test to be useful, it should have very high sensitivity (ability to correctly identify people who have the disease) and specificity (ability to correctly identify people who do nothave the disease). If a test is highly sensitive, it will identify most people with the disease—that is, it will result in very few false-negative results. If a test is highly specific, only a small number of people will test positive for the disease who do not have it—in other words, it will result in very few false-positive results.
Again, this is not the complete article. It went into some information in depth. If you want to read the whole article please click on the above link.
Please take a look at my prayer page and add these people to your prayer list. Let me know if you would like to add a name.
If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know he loves you.

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Is Refusing Cancer Treatment a Selfish Act?

Scripture of the Day:

Malachi 4:2
But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings; and ye shall go forth, and grow up as calves of the stall.



This is a hard topic to address. If it were my parent, daughter, aunt, sister...I'd definately want to butt in and give my opinion and be determined to help them make the "right" decision. But I know I can't. It's their decision and no one elses. 

My family did not have the issues that some families have with the decisions of the breast cancer patient. I've said this repeatedly...I went after this very aggressively. I did ask my children how they felt as I was going through this. One of them said that they took their attitude from the one I was showing. Yes they were upset, but since I wasn't falling apart (in public), they wouldn't either. 

But not all breast cancer patients are that decisive and aggressive. I've talked to family members who are very scared for the decisions their loved one is making. 

I found the following question and the answers that were given when asked. I have posted the answer to the question from the Expert. The link to this article is at the bottom of the page and if you go to it, you will find opinions from family members, etc. all over the spectrum. 

I know it's hard for some of you when going through this. This time more than ever is a time to be honest with each other. Maybe your loved one has a perfectly good reason for her/his decisions. Maybe they can't see what you are feeling. This is definately an individual's decision even though it effects the whole family.

Is refusing cancer treatment a selfish act? 


Expert Answers

Kenneth Robbins, M.D., is a senior medical editor of Caring.com. He is board certified in psychiatry and internal medicine, has a master's in public health from the University of Michigan, and is a clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His current clinical practice focuses primarily on geriatrics. He has written and contributed to many articles and is frequently invited to speak on psychiatric topics, such as psychiatry and the law, depression, anxiety, dementia, and suicide risk and prevention.

A decision about whether to accept treatment for cancer is a personal matter, and there is no right or wrong. One must start by carefully weighing the potential risks of the treatment and the potential benefits of the treatment. The person with cancer must ultimately decide which choice is in their overall best interest. "Selfish" has a negative connotation, as though the person with cancer is inappropriately thinking of himself or herself instead of others. In this case one must think of oneself, because it is ultimately the person with cancer who will have to deal with the consequences. One of the factors to consider, however, in addition to the risks and benefits of the potential treatment, is the effect either decision will have on family members and close friends.
If you are the person with cancer and you are seriously considering a choice to refuse treatment, I would encourage you to speak with the people closest to you about it. It is possible they will feel hurt, believing you are choosing to die rather than to spend time with them. It would likely be very helpful to them if they understood how and why you made your decision, or what it is you are wrestling with. It is even possible such a discussion will give you a new perspective that leads you to change your mind. This is a situation where a mental health professional may be invaluable. Such a person could help facilitate a discussion between you and the people you are concerned about, and help you each to understand what the other is experiencing. Hopefully this will lead to you supporting each other through this very challenging time.
Please take a look at my Prayer page and these people to your prayer list. I believe in the power of prayer and these people could use it. 
If you are making this journey as I am, may God bless you with His healing touch. I know He loves. You