Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/bcm/src/dev/www/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121
survivor | Zikoko!
  • 7 Nigerian Women Share Their Breast Cancer Story

    Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer in women after lung cancer. It not only affects the patient but their families as well. I spoke to some women who know people who have survived breast cancer and some who have lost people to breast cancer and this is their story. 

    Zara

    When I was two years old, my aunt found a benign lump in her breast. The doctors advised her to take things easy so she stopped driving. About 7-8 years later, she was diagnosed with cancer. She only told me after she got a mastectomy All my years of watching Medical TV shows did not prepare me for how real the whole thing felt. With chemotherapy and treatment, my aunt got better.

    Lola

    My aunt, a retired nurse, found a lump in her breast and didn’t tell anyone. Someone took her to a traditional home where she was told it was a spiritual attack. When things got out of hand, she reached out to my mother, who took her for a mammogram. She moved in with us so mum could take care of her. I remember her losing all her hair and a lot of weight. Her skin, palms, and sole became very dark. She was in so much pain. My mother had to give her an injection from time to time to keep her blood count up. Unfortunately, she died 10 days after her surgery due to negligence. Her dressing wasn’t done properly and there were maggots too.

    Nike

    My mom wasn’t literate and none of us lived with her, so when she had breast cancer, she didn’t tell anyone. According to her, she felt pain in her breast, she went to a general hospital and they referred her to a teaching hospital. The staff wanted her to come with her kids, at this point, she ran away and didn’t tell us. She endured the pain until 2004 when it became unbearable. When she told us, we took her to a doctor, by then, it was a stage 4 metastatic cancer. She went through chemo hoping they would do surgery but they were just managing her pain. In November, the doctors finally told her no surgery was being planned. From there, she seemed to shut down her own system and moved to an end-stage. She died in the second week of December 2004. Her body ravaged by cancer.

    Annie

    Two women in my family have had it. My aunt who managed it for 15 years, she’s passed on now and my grandmother who’s currently battling it. My grandmother found a lump while having a shower in 2008. Hers started out as axillary lymphadenopathy – which essentially is enlarged lymph nodes on the armpit. We’re literally in the car on the way to her 8th chemo cycle. I’ve been at this for such a long time, that her oncologist asked me to come and intern with him.

    Wunmi

    December 2019, my mom found a lump in her breast. She was diagnosed with cancer in April 2020. She was puzzled because 10 years ago, she had a mastectomy and thought it was gone for good. After having a back and forth with the LUTH oncology department about her files, she was able to get a consultation session with a private oncologist who charged three times as much. They put her on chemotherapy and she is expected to do four cycles before she is eligible for surgery. Before and during chemotherapy, she had terrible skin reactions but now, she is doing better and living more intentionally.

    Gift

    My aunt who is an unemployed single mother of one was diagnosed with cancer. She has been very secretive and gets defensive when asked about it. After convincing her to see a doctor, she refused to tell anyone about her diagnosis, taking agbo – local medicine – instead and saying this is how God probably wants her to die. I had to speak to the doctor who advised she removes the whole breast to avoid the cancer spreading. She has refused to do this. Recently, she said she found a hospital willing to do 6 months of Chemo for 180k but I don’t believe her.

    Shola

    March 2019, a few months before my mother turned 52, she found a lump in her breast while dressing up for work. My mum went to the hospital where she was examined and scheduled for a lumpectomy. The results showed a malignant tumour in her breast which was spreading fast. She was diagnosed with stage 3 breast cancer and was told she needed an urgent mastectomy so she could begin chemotherapy.

    Thing is, after her mastectomy, another examination was conducted on the breast removed and there were no traces of a malignant tumour. We had several tests done and the results were the same. By now, my mum has already done two rounds of chemo. The doctors advised she continue treatment so they don’t any chances. By August 2019, my mom had undergone 6 rounds of chemo. But this year August, she has been declared cancer-free.

    For updates on all things HER, kindly subscribe to our HER newsletter.

    [donation]

  • 10 Years Stronger, Sosoliso Crash Survivor Remains Unstoppable
    It has been ten years since the Sosoliso plane crash that killed 108 Nigerians, including sixty students of Loyola Jesuit College, Abuja who were traveling for the Christmas holidays.

    The plane burst into flames before crash landing at the Port Harcourt International airport.

    An anniversary procession held at Jesuit Memorial College, Aluu was attended by families of the deceased students.

    In spite of the fatal crash, the affected airport remains poorly managed.

    It was ranked as the worst airport in the world in an international survey that was carried out in October.

    One of the survivors Kechi Okwuchi sustained varying degrees of burns.

    She has undergone more than 10 surgeries and there are still more lined up for her in the future. Her treatment so far has been sponsored by good Samaritans and corporate organisations like Shell and the Lagos state government.

    She has written a book describing her experience during the unfortunate crash.

    She  wrote it as a tribute to all the victims of the crash.

    Earlier this year, she proved to the world how unstoppable and resilient she is.

    She graduated with first class honors from the University of St. Thomas, Texas and dedicated her degree to her school mates who died in the crash.

    She also spoke at TEDx event and told her story of how she overcame the post flight trauma.

    Her story is a source of inspiration for Nigerians and you can watch her speech for the memorial symposium of 2014.

    She addressed the speech to the President of Nigeria and appealed for refurbishment of the Nigerian aviation industry.

    Our thoughts are with the 108 victims of the Sososliso plane crash.

    https://twitter.com/AdForumCo/status/674930487689936896
    They may be gone, but they will always be remembered.