Steps to hope. A Practical Guide to Seeking the Best Possible Cancer Care
(2013)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : BookBaby : Made available through hoopla, 2013
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781483512006 (electronic bk.) MWT11735937, 1483512002 (electronic bk.) 11735937
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

My name is Frank Kalman. In 2001 I became what I call an Accidental Expert on Cancer. My 12 year old daughter, Calli, was diagnosed with neuroblastoma and our family began a long journey to seek a cure for her. While my family's story involves a parent's fight for his daughter's survival, the information contained here will be helpful to both children and adults diagnosed with cancer, their families, caregivers, and loved ones. I am a dad, not a doctor, and this is not meant to be a medical how-to or even a self-help book. Cancer is a terrifying odyssey none of us want to experience. But if we must, a Field Guide can surely help. This is my attempt to share with you some of the things our family learned during our daughter's fight with childhood cancer. In hindsight, I realize that during Calli's fight with cancer our family had to make some of the most important decisions up front, when we knew the least. This booklet is about creating a critical understanding: DOCTORS AND MEDICAL CENTERS YOU GO TO CAN MAKE A HUGE DIFFERENCE IN YOUR BATTLE WITH CANCER. I believe that if you spend one afternoon identifying the key centers for your disease that can confirm your diagnosis and give you their recommendations on what would be the best treatments for you or your child, you will significantly increase the probabilities of a great outcome. We will show you how to find those key centers, and how to communicate with them. The inspiration for this book came from two moms I met many years ago during a stay at the Ronald McDonald House in Manhattan. These women had initially been at hospitals that claimed they were quite capable of handling the cancer in question, neuroblastoma. But in both cases the children were misdiagnosed. The first mother told me that "they gave my girl the wrong chemo." She realized the problem quickly and brought her daughter to the east coast. The second mom said the same thing happened to her, "but we paid a much higher price. I lost my son. They were winging it." I believe hope is a function of options. I discovered this when I lost my own hope during my daughter's fight with cancer. It was a dark and debilitating period for me, and I can only imagine what it was like for Calli. At the time, she was going through huge levels of chemo to kill her cancer and the chemo wasn't working. It felt like it was the end of the line. However, as soon as we discovered a new option, hope returned

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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