|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
media article:
Cancer survivor helps launch awareness campaign
e-letter of response:
Now, after close to a decade as one of the minority who has survived ovarian cancer, it is apparent that the message concerning this highly lethal woman's cancer, still is not receiving the respect nor attention it deserves. How, as a society, is it that we fail and continue to fail not only ovarian cancer women/families, but, all those who envision best care for this woman's cancer? The impact of hearing: "well, they are going to die anyway" is distressingly commonplace even today. Those are infuriatingly painful words to hear time and time again. Yet, here we have a small group of women fighting not only for themselves but for the future of Saskatchewan's children - your children. Each time we lose an ovarian cancer woman to this deadly cancer, a part of us dies with her - again and again. In good and bad economic times, little has changed, so it should be obvious that funding is not the issue. Policy makers need to be reminded that these women are not number-crunching statistics, but walking, breathing, caring Mothers, Sisters, Grandmothers and Citizens who have much Hope in the face of extreme adversity. Stick your neck out on this issue and make the obvious right decisions! You could make worse decisions. Sandi Pniauskas
That was a distressing article for me to read. The future care of women in the province lies in the balance.
ReplyDelete