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Teen having cancer treatment in Arkansas returns to ransacked home

December 28th, 2009 Stephenville Online No comments

tanner-walkerKENNEDALE — Tanner Walker headed home recently with his best Christmas present – remission from a rare cancer that required grueling chemotherapy treatments at an Arkansas hospital.

But someone denied him his next-biggest wish — to relax in the comfort and security of his Kennedale home for the holidays.

Before he and his mother, Angela Walker, arrived at their doorstep Dec. 18, his grandmother called to break the news that the home that friends and relatives had decorated to welcome the 17-year-old was ransacked by burglars.

They stole thousands of dollars worth of belongings, including a flat-screen TV, a video camera and about 500 DVDs, leaving Tanner and his mother unnerved and even more worried about dealing with about $290,000 in medical bills.

“It was just so disheartening,” Angela Walker said. “He was so excited to come home. It was all he had been dreaming of, to have Christmas and have a break from all that had been going on.”

Tanner added: “I was hoping it would be normal, but it didn’t turn out that way.”

Life-changing diagnosis

He had spent the past month getting his final round of treatment for multiple myeloma, a cancer that causes abnormal plasma cells in bone marrow to multiply and overwhelm the production of healthy blood cells. The disease can cause bones to break easily, the tell-tale symptom when Tanner slipped while walking in June.

“I didn’t even really fall,” he said. “I caught myself before I fell, but my leg just snapped. At first it didn’t feel like it was broken.”

Doctors in Fort Worth found a tumor in his bone and were stunned to learn that it was myeloma, which usually strikes people over age 50 and is almost never seen in people as young as Tanner.

Tanner regretted acting on his first inpulse, which was to search the Internet for information about the disease.

“There’s a lot of bad news about it,” he said. “But when we got to Arkansas, the first thing the doctor said was that he would cure me. So that made me feel better.”

Knocking out cancer

His doctors had referred him to the renowned Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy, part of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.

Specialists there chose an aggressive treatment, using chemotherapy to kill the plasma cells and two transplants of Tanner’s stem cells to rebuild healthy blood-cell production. It took several lengthy visits to the treatment center, but the payoff is that Tanner is in full remission.

Life expectancy with regular drug treatments used to be about 30 months. But stem-cell transplants, added about 20 years ago, and improved drug therapies achieve remission in about 85 percent of cases, and specialists now expect as many as three-fourths of those patients will never suffer a recurrence, said Bonnie Jenkins, a nurse and program coordinator at the institute.

With the good news for Tanner came medical bills, most of which his healthcare provider declined to pay because it considers the treatment experimental.tanner-walker2

Angela Walker, who is divorced and earns less than $50,000 a year, had committed to the center that she would pay any uncovered costs. She felt that she had no choice after the diagnosis.

“That night the oncologist called me and said that at his state he would have two years to live,” she said.

Standard of care

James Ford, general counsel for U.S. Health and Life Insurance Co. in Michigan, said two independent medical reviews agreed that Tanner’s regimen was not standard.

“But there are a lot of other bills that are caught up in this situation that are payable once we get the bills and look at them,” Ford said. Those include treatment for the broken leg, he said.

Jenkins was not satisfied, saying many other insurance policies cover the center’s myeloma treatment.

“The first thing everyone has to remember is this is not a pediatric disease,” Jenkins said. “We’ve seen five cases under 18. That’s probably more than anybody else in the world has seen. Any insurance company who believes there would be a standard of care for a 17-year-old with this disease is blowing smoke.”

Coming home

A surprise welcome for Tanner was on Kelsey Ruck’s mind when she went to the Walker home Dec. 18.

Ruck, Tanner’s sister-in-law, was loaded down with presents to put under the tree, which other relatives had put up along with lights and other decorations.

“But when I got over there, the door was unlocked, and I walked in and everything was basically trashed,” Ruck said. “My heart stopped. I couldn’t imagine who would do something like this, knowing what they were going through.”

Kennedale police Capt. Darrell Hull said he has no leads. But he added that his detectives have not had time to spend on the burglary because they are focused on investigating a triple-fatality arson fire that occurred the same day.

Tanner said he suspects that the burglars were young and knew the family, which makes the break-in that much harder to bear.

But he doesn’t dwell on it so much anymore.

“I’m in full remission,” he said. “Everything is good now.”

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Categories: News Tags: , ,

Australia – Mount Alvernia College bans girl for shaving head

November 10th, 2009 Stephenville Online No comments

Emily Pridham

Emily Pridham

A 15-YEAR-old Brisbane school girl has been suspended for shaving her head to raise money for vital cancer research.

Emily Pridham and her family told Channel Nine News her father is battling leukemia.

He underwent a bone marrow transplant a few weeks ago but has been given only a few months to live.

Ms Pridham decided to shave her head as part of a fundraiser for cancer research.

“Basically my way of coping is to try and help other people going through the same thing,” she said.

Ms Pridham said she has been banned from Mount Alvernia College until her hair grows back.

Barbara Pridham said she supports her daughter’s fundraising decision.

“I am just appalled that she could be suspended by a Catholic school that promotes joy, respect and community spirit,” she said.

Mount Alvernia College released a statement to Channel Nine News that said Ms Pridham had breached the college’s uniform guidelines and had been suspended because of “ongoing issues”.

By Tuesday morning, Ms Pridham had established a Facebook group to support her and was quickly gathering members.

She said on the page: “My inbox and Facebook wall are overflowing with messages of support. I Love my MAC girls, and thanks for standing behind me, It realy shows that in times of need the girls will always stick together ..”

Update: Today on November 10, 2009 the school aired an official response to these accusations. The details are listed below:

Dear parents and carers, staff and students and friends of Mount Alvernia College

I write with reference to the media reports of the suspension of a student from Mount Alvernia yesterday. Sadly for our college community, the media reports that have been aired do not accurately represent the situation. We value and respect the rights of every young woman in our community and we will continue to respect this student’s right to privacy by not making public details of the disciplinary issues involved.

As a Franciscan school our philosophy is to actively assist those in need and we do this on a daily basis. It is distressing that necessary caring guidance provided to this student over a range of issues has been misrepresented. Her father’s illness has been known at the college and we have continued to actively support the student and her family throughout the years they have been associated with the college. It is unfortunate that this head shaving incident has received wide publicity when all the facts are not known.

The college has guidelines on fundraising and has in the past allowed students to shave their heads to raise money for cancer. We have an active Outreach programme at the college where funds are raised for all sorts of causes, the most recent being $800 raised by Year 12 students for Breast Cancer. Over the course of this year, the students at Mount Alvernia College have raised in excess of $14,000 for causes such as leukaemia, the bush fires, our sister schools in Egypt and Papua New Guinea, Daffodil Day, Colour for a Cure, St Vincent de Paul Winter Appeal, Project Compassion, Tatts and Tiaras. We are currently undertaking to supply 32 local families with Christmas hampers as part of the annual St Vincent de Paul Christmas Appeal. All students are actively encouraged to participate in these organised school activities which are centred on our Franciscan values.

As leader of this community I have found this situation very difficult when the full facts of the situation were not able to be revealed. I ask for your continued prayerful support for all in our community including this young woman and her family and can assure you that we will continue to work towards building our educational community in the spirit of Francis, Clare and Elizabeth Hayes.

Regards

Kerrie

Dr Kerrie Tuite

Principal

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Categories: Activism Tags: ,
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