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Italian opera superstar Luciano Pavarotti, diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in July 2006 and recently hospitalized with a fever, died at his native Modena home on Thursday. With him were his wife Nicoletta, four daughters, and his sister. He was 71.
Friends and family had hoped for a miracle for Pavarotti. Sadly, this was not possible. Though to have survived pancreatic cancer for more than one year is quite amazing. The disease is deadly in most cases and most survive for only months.
Pavarotti was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer just before he was set to resume a farewell tour in July 2006. Instead, he headed for surgery. He never again performed publicly.
Writer Jeph Lobe has been working through the stages of grief in the most recent issues of Marvel Comics. You see, Captain America has been gunned down. And his buddies -- Wolverine, the Avengers, Iron Man, and Spider-Man -- are battling with denial, anger, bargaining, and depression. The whole story will be revealed when the latest issue, Fallen Son, hits newsstands July 5th, the day after Independence Day.
Loeb, also an executive producer for NBC's Heroes, chose his storyline to represent current politics.
"Part of it grew out of the fact that we are a country that's at war, we are being perceived differently in the world," he says. "He wears the flag and he is assassinated -- it's impossible not to have it at least be a metaphor for the complications of present day."
This comment just arrived in response to yesterday's post Headed for melanoma, and it's just too raw and powerful to leave buried in the comment section of the site.
So here it is, word for word -- a chilling and empowering message from a 37-year-old mom of two living with a disease that is downright deadly.
I have melanoma. I was diagnosed last August and have had 6 surgeries in 6 months.
I have lost 4 members in my melanoma support group. I go to Jaime's funeral tomorrow afternoon. She was 29 years old. Heather was 37 when she died on March 2, 2007. The midwife noticed a suspicious mole on her leg during the birth of her 4th child. She died 23 months later. Jan was a mother of 5 ages 9 to 19, she passed away on February 8, 2007. Ceri was only 20 years old when melanoma claimed her life on January 14, 2007.
I always thought skin cancer had to be HUGE, ugly, and hard to ignore. I didn't know it could be small, have no symptoms, and KILL you.
Melanoma incidence is increasing faster than any other cancer. According to statistics found on the American Cancer Society's website (www.cancer.org), the prognosis for someone diagnosed with melanoma is worse, stage for stage, than someone with breast cancer.
Getting more than 3 blistering sunburns during childhood doubles your risk. Sunbed use increases ones risk. Having fair skin and light eyes also puts you at a higher than average risk, but having dark skin does not make you immune. Bob Marley died from Melanoma in 1981.
Everyone at higher risk should get screened by a dermatologist every year. And all of us should be checking our own skin each month.
Melanoma is a virulent and aggressive cancer. It begins in the melanocytes, or the pigment in the skin. It presents itself as a change in an existing mole or skin pigment, or in the formation of a new one. It is easily treated in its most early stages. Once it spreads, though, it is often fatal.
Unfortunately, there is no cure for melanoma. Melanoma is one of the cancers that won't respond to conventional chemotherapy. There have been no significant advances in the medical treatment or survival rate in the last 30 years.
More awareness is needed. Most think "it's only skin cancer" and consider it nothing serious. But I can tell you with absolute certainty, they are DEAD wrong.
Bill Clinton, mourning the loss of his stepfather, joined family and friends and hundreds of others who gathered on Saturday for the funeral of a man the former president says brought his mother the best years she ever had.
Richard Kelley, 91, died Wednesday at home after a long battle with cancer of the colon and liver. He was a retired salesman and was married to Clinton's mother, Virginia, for 12 years before she died in 1994 from breast cancer.
Clinton spoke to more than 600 people at Kelley's funeral, sharing his love for the man he said left the world with grace.
Angelina Jolie, who told CNN host Larry King on December 18 that her 56-year-old mother was battling ovarian cancer, is now confirming that her mother passed away on Saturday afternoon.
According to a new release, Angelina Jolie and brother James Haven were with their mom, actress Marcheline Bertrand, when she died this weekend at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. It is reported that Jolie's boyfriend, Brad Pitt, was at the hospital with Jolie and her brother.
Bertrand, divorced from Jolie's Oscar-winning actor father Jon Voight and primary caretaker of her children, had small roles in the movies Lookin' to Get Out in 1982 and The Man Who Loved Women in 1983.
This past summer, a man in the business of helping smokers quit, was diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer. Just months later, anti-smoking guru Allen Carr lost his battle with cancer. On November 29th, Carr died at his home in Malaga, Spain.
A heavy smoker for 33 years before quitting 23 years ago, Carr claimed to have found an easy way to quit smoking. From that discovery, he founded The Easy Way to Stop Smoking Program, which would eventually grow into 70 clinics in 30 countries. In addition, his company publishes how-to quit smoking books, CDs, tapes and DVDs.
Using cognitive therapy, Carr told smokers interested in quitting that they could do it without willpower, without suffering withdrawal and without gaining weight. The celebrity endorsements for his program include Sir Anthony Hopkins, Sean Bean, Marie Helvin, Johnny Cash, George Harrison, Lisa Stansfield, Sir Richard Branson, Britney Spears, Susannah York, Bruce Oldfield, Stefano Gabbana and Julie Christie.
Carr is credited with helping over 25 million people to quit smoking.
An Easy Way to Stop Smoking Program clinic spokesperson was quoted as saying, "Allen spent many years in smoke-filled rooms after he quit, while treating smokers for addiction. He is certain that had he not quit, he would have died 20 years ago." Near the time of his death, Carr wrote a letter to Tony Blair urging his government and NHS to accept the easy method program. Carr was 72.
Due to the recent death of Ryder Cup golfer Darren Clarke's young wife Heather to breast cancer, golfer Padraig Harrington is donating all the prize money he earns from playing in the PGA Championship to breast cancer research. To honor the memory of Heather Clarke, if he takes the trophy, he plans to donate the $1.2-million dollar purse to the breast cancer charity of Darren Clarke's choice.
"Darren has his choice of charity, and I'll donate whatever I win this week." Harrington said. "This is at least a practical way of helping." Many of the golfers in the tournament are wearing black arm bands to show respect.
Late Saturday night, Heather Clarke, only 39 years of age, mother of two small boys, passed away in London's Royal Marsden Hospital after her struggle to survive breast cancer that had spread to her bones and liver.
"I think both Darren and Heather were exceptionally brave and so dignified about what they've gone through," stated Harrington. "It's been terribly hard."
On Thursday, the funeral for Heather Clarke will take place in Portrush and she will be laid to rest at Ballywillan Church. Just ten years ago, Heather and Darren were married at Ballywillan Church.
Australian pop star and breast cancer survivor Kylie Minogue has lost her close friend and chauffeur Nigel McCarroll to cancer. McCarroll supported Minogue through her cancer struggles into cancer survivorship. Attending the funeral, she laid a wreath in the shape of his favourite Audi car at the crematorium service, according to Movie & Entertainment News provided by World Entertainment News Network.
A friend is quoted as saying, "Kylie was devastated that the disease Nigel helped her fight took his life."
Being a cancer survivor is bittersweet, when some of those you are close to, or become close to during cancer treatments and recovery, do not make it with you. There is always a lining of sadness to the celebrations of being alive, of beating cancer, of knowing you survived cancer. You do not forget the ones who are lost to cancer.
In honoring the memory of those who walked with you, you do not allow yourself to forget. And in those times, when you lose someone close who journeyed along side you in the fight to live, being a survivor holds little in triumphant feelings when you know that someone else fighting the same disease did not make it. You question the fairness of life -- and realize it is not fair at all.
Quick autopsies -- or rapid organ donation -- may steer scientists in the direction of better diagnosing and treating the most lethal of cancers. Some 33,700 Americans will be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer this year -- and 32,300 will die. There is no early detection test for this disease and early symptoms are vague and may be mistaken for health concerns like indigestion. By the time the classic symptoms -- jaundice and itching -- surface, the cancer has typically spread and patients have only months to live. Rapid autopsies have been used before -- for Alzheimer's and prostate cancer -- but this a first in the study of pancreatic cancer and it just may lead to the discovery of what makes this cancer so aggressive and so deadly.
Just before her 2nd birthday Allison Faith Webb, called Ally, was diagnosed with Wilm’s Tumor, a form of kidney
cancer. At the time of diagnosis, the cancer had already spread to her lungs. Ally underwent 3 major surgeries,
radiation and 3 different kinds of chemotherapy. She received care at Children’s Hospital in Oklahoma City and at
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis. While her mother cradled her little daughter in her arms, Ally
lost her battle with cancer. Ally's House, founded in memory of Ally, assists
Oklahoma families who have a child with cancer. Ally's House helps families with medical expenses, travel expenses,
clothing, groceries, short-term housing, overdue bills, prescriptions, hospice care, and if needed, funeral expenses.
As important, Ally's House hosts events for children living with cancer, like ice cream parties, arts and
crafts parties, concerts and music events, amusement park trips and picnics. The foundation relies on donations in
providing many of these services. If you can help, visit Ally's House for more information. If you know of a family who
needs help, tell them about Ally's House. Allison's family says that the name, Ally's House, was chosen because each
time Ally came home from the hospital she would exclaim, “We’re at Ally’s house!” Ally's House
symbolizes a safe place of comfort and love. This is the mission of the foundation for families they serve -- to create
a comfort zone of love -- in memory of their beloved daughter Ally.
In 2001, after the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Debbie Reeve, a FDNY paramedic, spent several
months at Ground Zero working in the morgue. Two years later, she developed breathing problems. The next year, Reeve
was diagnosed with mesothelioma, a rare form of lung cancer. Mesothelioma is a malignant lung cancer linked to asbestos
exposure. Reeve was exposed to asbestos particles in the air caused by the collapsing twin towers. According to her
physician and her family, her work at Ground Zero is the direct link to the cancer that has taken her life. She died
Wednesday, leaving behind her husband, David Reeve, 45, a FDNY paramedic, and two children, a daughter Elizabeth, who
is ten years old, and a son Mark, who is only six years old. Her family said she suffered greatly leading up to her
death, as the cancer consumed her body.
The Daily News has already reported that 23 Ground
Zero workers have died from the toxic mix of chemicals present at Ground Zero. The heartbreak of the day that changed
this nation forever, continues.