October is Breast Cancer Month. Almost everyone knows
someone who has, or has had, cancer. Or maybe it’s you, and you’re a survivor. Do
you “Run for the Cure?” Do you donate to Breast Cancer this month? No, I’m not
hustling for donations, but I like to call attention to this month. And through
research, more and more people survive. I’ve known several people who have been
diagnosed with breast cancer. Many years ago, they didn’t survive. Now the
prognosis has improved.
To me, breast cancer is personal. I am a survivor. It’s
been many, many years since I was diagnosed and treated. Despite, or maybe
because of mammograms, women are being diagnosed younger every year.
Again, many years ago, (and no I’m not going to say how
many) there was a Cross-Canada Breast Cancer study for women between forty and
sixty-five years of age. I volunteered and managed to sneak in by a few months.
You were assigned a number when you volunteered. One set of numbers checked in once
a year and filled out a nutritional survey. The other set of numbers did a
nutritional survey and had a mammogram once a year. I drew the side that
received mammograms. My second year I flunked out. If you’re diagnosed with
cancer you’re dropped from the survey. In my mammogram the second year they
found a small area about the size of a dime with maybe ten pin pricks inside
it. That was the cancer. They did a fine wire biopsy to confirm it was cancer.
I had a lumpectomy the next day.
I’m sure my risk of survival would be much less if I hadn’t
been on the study. I probably wouldn’t have been diagnosed for at least another
five years. It might not have gotten any larger. Apparently, some small cancers
don’t grow, so maybe mine wouldn’t have, but honestly, I’m glad they found it
and removed it. And who knows if I would
have survived if it did continue to grow for five more years. It did come back,
in the same breast, ten years later.
I know there are pros and cons about mammograms. Pros-
They do save lives. Mammograms are estimated to reduce cancer rates by 15%.
Cons – They can cause significant harm. Some people will undergo treatment for
no reason – because of a cancer that never would have grown. Women may experience
psychological distress including anxiety and uncertainty for years because of an
inaccurate result. This comes from a report at https://medshadow.org/medshadow_bblog/mammogram-pros-cons/
if you’d like to read the whole article.
And some breast cancers are too aggressive and virulent
to control, no matter how early it is caught.
According to a Cancer.Net link the average 5-year
survival rate for people wit breast cancer is 90%. The average 10-year survival
rate is 83%. If the cancer is located only in the breast (not spread to lymph
nodes) the 5-year survival rate is 99%. Here’s the link to that report https://www.cancer.net/camcer-types/breast-cancer/statistics/2015
If you’d like to share your experience, or a friends,
with cancer, I’d love to hear it.
I always knew you were a strong lady! I'm very lucky to be able to get to know you.
ReplyDeleteHaving heard the words "it's found in last stages" I can say they truly do change your life and what's important. Thankfully God healed me of mine but my 'Mom' battled it, other family and friends have. Something I find inspiring is how each person seems to have unimaginable strength when they hold their head high and let the world know they aren't done yet.
Survivors true and strong!
Thank you for sharing your story.
Dee
#PMInc