Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know what exactly his 'I thought it was the coffee" symptom was?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is typically a beatable cancer. (I’m a colon cancer survivor).
Get your colonoscopy. Follow your med team’s recommendations of gold standard treatment.
He chose to treat the cancer “holistically” and tried “a bunch of different things”.
It’s 100% his choice and decision. But others should not take a stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. Statistically it’s a beatable cancer dx.
I just looked this up THIS POST IS BS he did chemotherapy and all that.
WHY are you spreading misinformation PP? What's wrong with you?
Of course he did chemo. It was very clear that he fought like hell to stay alive for his family. He fought his illness with such grace. It takes a real piece of work to criticize an objectively good person gone too soon, so soon after their death. Just wow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is typically a beatable cancer. (I’m a colon cancer survivor).
Get your colonoscopy. Follow your med team’s recommendations of gold standard treatment.
He chose to treat the cancer “holistically” and tried “a bunch of different things”.
It’s 100% his choice and decision. But others should not take a stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. Statistically it’s a beatable cancer dx.
I just looked this up THIS POST IS BS he did chemotherapy and all that.
WHY are you spreading misinformation PP? What's wrong with you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is typically a beatable cancer. (I’m a colon cancer survivor).
Get your colonoscopy. Follow your med team’s recommendations of gold standard treatment.
He chose to treat the cancer “holistically” and tried “a bunch of different things”.
It’s 100% his choice and decision. But others should not take a stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. Statistically it’s a beatable cancer dx.
Wait what? He didn't treat it and he could have lived is that what you're saying?
NP- This person is lying. He did go through regular treatment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did he ever have chemo?
Sure did.
Why didn’t it work? Was it just too late? This is so sad.
It's like you've never heard of cancer before. What rock do you live under?
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to show my whole ignorance on the health care system & treatment in this country, but my mom passed away two years ago from the same cancer James had, but she was 74. She had treatments for two full years, plus multiple extremely long (i'm talking one stay was 5 straight months!) hospital stays during this time. My parents are completely middle class.
How did my mom get away with these cancer treatments and long hospital stays not bankrupting them? With the sale of the house after she passed, my dad now has almost 2M in an investment account, and he now lives with my brother. There were a few residual bills from the hospital stays for a few months after she passed but those are gone now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is typically a beatable cancer. (I’m a colon cancer survivor).
Get your colonoscopy. Follow your med team’s recommendations of gold standard treatment.
He chose to treat the cancer “holistically” and tried “a bunch of different things”.
It’s 100% his choice and decision. But others should not take a stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. Statistically it’s a beatable cancer dx.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is typically a beatable cancer. (I’m a colon cancer survivor).
Get your colonoscopy. Follow your med team’s recommendations of gold standard treatment.
He chose to treat the cancer “holistically” and tried “a bunch of different things”.
It’s 100% his choice and decision. But others should not take a stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. Statistically it’s a beatable cancer dx.
Wait what? He didn't treat it and he could have lived is that what you're saying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is typically a beatable cancer. (I’m a colon cancer survivor).
Get your colonoscopy. Follow your med team’s recommendations of gold standard treatment.
He chose to treat the cancer “holistically” and tried “a bunch of different things”.
It’s 100% his choice and decision. But others should not take a stage 3 colorectal cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. Statistically it’s a beatable cancer dx.
Anonymous wrote:Also recall that he's been sick and unable to work for quite some time, so they've likely been living off savings for a while.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to show my whole ignorance on the health care system & treatment in this country, but my mom passed away two years ago from the same cancer James had, but she was 74. She had treatments for two full years, plus multiple extremely long (i'm talking one stay was 5 straight months!) hospital stays during this time. My parents are completely middle class.
How did my mom get away with these cancer treatments and long hospital stays not bankrupting them? With the sale of the house after she passed, my dad now has almost 2M in an investment account, and he now lives with my brother. There were a few residual bills from the hospital stays for a few months after she passed but those are gone now.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to show my whole ignorance on the health care system & treatment in this country, but my mom passed away two years ago from the same cancer James had, but she was 74. She had treatments for two full years, plus multiple extremely long (i'm talking one stay was 5 straight months!) hospital stays during this time. My parents are completely middle class.
How did my mom get away with these cancer treatments and long hospital stays not bankrupting them? With the sale of the house after she passed, my dad now has almost 2M in an investment account, and he now lives with my brother. There were a few residual bills from the hospital stays for a few months after she passed but those are gone now.