Judith from Cambridgeshire was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2004 when she was just 37 years old. Judith has never smoked and has no history of lung cancer in her family. She is married with two children, Samuel (10) and Sophie (13).
Judith’s devastating story began when she developed a cold on the May Bank Holiday in 2004.
“I had what I thought was a normal cold so we’d delayed our family day outing until the Bank Holiday Monday when I was feeling a bit better.”
By the end of the following week, Judith’s cold had turned into a cough which wouldn’t go away, so she went to her doctor’s a few weeks later who prescribed her a course of antibiotics.
“The antibiotics didn’t get rid of my silly cough, so I went back to the surgery and my doctor gave me steroids and an asthma inhaler which seemed to do the trick but I was sent for a chest x-ray at my local cottage hospital just to be on the safe side. “
Judith was also booked in for routine lung function tests.
“I remember feeling absolutely fine as I cycled down to my surgery When I arrived, I was told the tests couldn’t go ahead because the x-ray had shown that my lung had collapsed.”
Judith was referred to her local chest physician for further investigation.
“I was told that I was a young, relatively fit person who had never smoked – it was unlikely to be anything sinister.”
Sadly on 4th August 2004, after two bronchoscopies, Judith was informed that she had a large malignant tumour on her left lung.
“We were in total shock as a family but we had great hope that the cancer had not spread and they could just remove my lung.”
Unfortunately, three weeks later, Judith was broken the news that the cancer had spread to her bones and was given just one year to live.
Thankfully, nearly two years on, Judith is well and receiving treatment to prolong her life.
“We have gone through a real period of readjustment but we are getting on with things as a family. You don’t think something like this can happen to you – but when it does, you just have to be positive for the children’s sake.”
Judith and her family have encountered the stigma attached to lung cancer, despite Judith never having touched a cigarette.
“When my husband tells people I have lung cancer, they immediately assume I’m a smoker. In fact, it’s not just old men who chain-smoke who get lung cancer.” |