Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Family Update

The big family news is that Tommy and Kelly have brought a gorgeous baby into the world. Baby Amanda is Mom's new excitement and source of energy. Although she credits her card games with the ladies as another great source.

She reports that she is doing fine. Chemo is over and she is awaiting the start of radiation, which should start around the first of June.

She is tired.

The last chemo really drained her and she claims she doesn't have her strength back yet.

"By 3 PM, I'm usually in my favorite chair reading or napping. I had a CT scan of my lungs last week. There is a small 1cm shadow, which was there in Jan. The other two spots, noticed when I was hospitalized, are gone. So I am scheduled for another PET? scan next week."

She promises that once she gets the results of her radiation schedule, she will update her blog.

And she can't stop talking about a Maya Angelou reading she recently attended.

"I went with new friends and old friends. It was very inspiring."

She said something about clouds. If you want to get her talking, ask her about her clouds.
I'm beginning to think I might want cancer. Blogs dedicated to my recovery. Card games thrown in my favor. A loving and adoring husband that waits on me hand a foot. Yeah, Mom is doing it in style.
But then, she always does. Doesn't she?

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Mom's Last Chemo was Monday!!

Cancer in the news....

Half of all cancer deaths are preventable
by KRISTEN GERENCHER
MarketWatch

Cancer can strike anyone, even the fit and health-conscious, but dying from it is far from inevitable, according to a new report.

As many as half of cancer deaths could be prevented if more people made lifestyle changes such as avoiding smoking and excessive sun exposure, eating nutritiously and getting regular exercise and recommended health screenings, according to a study from the American Cancer Society.

Whether due to socioeconomic or personal challenges, many people have trouble following these common-sense health precautions, said Vilma Cokkinides, co-author of the report and program director of risk-factor surveillance for the American Cancer Society in Atlanta.

"What's astonishing is how small the numbers are in terms of the population actually doing these things," Cokkinides said. "It's a disconnect. . . . The awareness that theoretically half (of cancer deaths) could be prevented hasn't gotten in the mindset."

Smoking is by far the biggest sticking point because it increases the risk of many kinds of cancer, not just lung, and is expected to kill 170,000 this year. What's more, about a third of the 564,830 expected cancer deaths in 2006 will be related to poor diets, physical inactivity and obesity, which itself causes many chronic illnesses, the report said.

Americans have been receiving the anti-tobacco message for decades, but one in five adults still lights up. Despite calls for better nutrition and more physical activity to maintain a healthy weight, waistlines are growing dangerously wider. And few people do enough to protect their skin from the sun's harmful rays, leading to high rates of skin cancer.

People also fail to follow commonly recommended screenings based on age, family and medical history to catch cancer in its earliest, most treatable phases, the study said.

The ability to keep up with recommended screenings for colorectal, cervical and breast cancer - where evidence of effective treatment and reduced chance of death is greatest - is largely dependent on whether people have health insurance, Cokkinides said. "It's perhaps the single most important determinant."

Cancer's disease burden is significant. Last year, it cost the United States nearly $210 billion, according to estimates from the National Institutes of Health. The figure includes $74 billion in direct medical costs, $17.5 billion for lost productivity due to illness and $118.4 billion for productivity loss due to premature death.

To be sure, tasks such as maintaining a healthy weight can be difficult in environments that promote fast, unhealthful food and lack affordable fruits and vegetables, the study said.

Obesity has connections with postmenopausal breast cancer and colon cancer, Cokkinides said. Still, the number of children, teens and men who were overweight or obese grew significantly between 1999 and 2004, according to a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published in the April 5 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. Women's obesity rate appears to have leveled off, the study found.

Women's screening rates for breast and cervical cancer have increased over the years as awareness has grown, but the numbers are still modest. Only 55 percent of women 40 and older, the age at which annual screenings are supposed to begin, said they got a mammogram in the last year, the study said. Those who are uninsured, have the lowest incomes and least education as well as immigrants who've been in the country less than five years had even lower screening rates.

Colon and rectal cancers have a high survival rate when detected early, especially when precancerous polyps can be removed during colonoscopy. But only 39 percent of colon cancers are diagnosed at an early stage, when 90 percent of patients go on to survive at least five more years, according to the report.

Even when patients have a hereditary link with cancer, they can choose to have cancer-risk counseling that may help them take control if further prevention options or more aggressive screening is needed, said Dr. Jeffrey Weitzel, director of the Department of Clinical Cancer Genetics at the City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center in Duarte, Calif.

"Genetics isn't necessarily destiny," Weitzel said. "Advanced protocols . . . are designed to take what we know about breast cancer and epidemiology and turn it around in a way that might allow prevention."

Earlier diagnosis of breast cancer, for example, often allows not just for better odds of beating it altogether, but also better quality of life during treatment than was achievable even a few years ago, he said.

"Right now what we have is a good circumstance," Weitzel said. "We're having to try to figure out ever more carefully which of the early-stage patients truly need therapy and which could be spared, whereas previously we were hoping just to have a greater proportion of them be earlier-staged."

Weitzel recommended people interested in learning more about guidelines for screening and referrals, particularly those with a familial risk of cancer, visit the National Comprehensive Cancer Network's Web site at www.nccn.org or the City of Hope at www.cityof hope.org/ccgp.

As a general rule for those with a family history, "if there's cancer under the age of 50, breast or colon, that might warrant referral in cancer-risk counseling," he said. "That would be the starting point."

It's not just individuals who can improve their chances of surviving cancer by modifying their lifestyles and complying with recommended screenings. Social policies such as more statewide bans on indoor smoking and targeted cessation programs for teen smokers can help people develop healthier habits and, most importantly, stick to them to reduce their risk of dying from related disease, Cokkinides said.

Wednesday, May 03, 2006

C O N G R A T U L A T I O N S !!!!


"How did he do it?"

She smiled. "It was really romantic."

"Joe Wiese, romantic?"

"Well, he was going to do it on the road at a park near Lake Shasta, but it was cold and rainy. Then he was going to do it on the beach after we signed our lease, but it was cold and rainy again. So he spent 30 minutes trying to get our gas fireplace to work. After he got a fire started he made a bed on the floor in front of the fireplace. He sat down next to me and said the sweetest things to me and then he told me the story about how your dad sold his blood to buy a ring for your mom (he pulled out the box) and then asked me to marry him with the ring that sealed your parent's fate. I was crying, he was crying . . .it was well . . . very special. "

CONGRATULATIONS to my brother and his beautiful fiance Jennifer Hernandez. Welcome to the Wiese family!!! Perfect timing for some good news in the Wiese household.


Tuesday, May 02, 2006

All the news that is fit to print...

Dear Family,

Hope all is well. This is a short note with current update.

Saw the Oncologist today. My white cells, red cells and platelets are back to normal. I do not have to postpone my next and LAST chemo on Monday the 8th. I feel good.

I've been walking as much as possible. Hope to play cards with Jane and Carolyn tomorrow.
Mike is still looking at boats and enjoying the process. He went to Victoria and Sydney yesterday by ferry to see one in B.C. On the way home, he stopped at the BC museum and bought me a beautiful blue stone and mineral necklace. It worked. I gave him permission to get a bigger boat!

Talked to Joe's fiancee, Jenn. She will be joining Joe at Pendleton in early June. They will have a civil ceremony on or about June 10th. Her parents and Dad and I will be there. Joe is enjoying setting up their new apartment. They hope to have a church wedding early next year.

Katryn will be camping in Hawaii in early June. Ingrid is working in DC. She should be returning to NYC soon. We have been having a great time tracking her exploits via her blog.

Maiken is busy and fine. She recently appeared in an off-off Broadway play that got rave reviews. Especially from her sister.

We hope for a visit from Kirsten this summer. She managed to get out to DC to meet Joes's fiancee and have lunch with Ingrid.

This Sunday, Kaitlyn makes her first communion. Georg and Joe will represent us. Jared's hockey team won the regional championship and Jared is one of their MVP.

I'll be fitted with an arm sleeve next week to wear when I'm flying. It keeps down the swelling in my arm with lympodema. I plan to fly to San Diego for Joe and Jenn's vows and to NJ for brother, Mike's wedding.

I send my love to each and everyone.

Mom/Susie