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Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Mike Kinnaird
45 episodes
5 days ago
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Society & Culture
Science
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All content for Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird is the property of Mike Kinnaird and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
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Episodes (20/45)
Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Sanna: What Happens When Healthcare Abandons You Post-Treatment.
When treatment ended, Sanna Tiensuu-Piirainen was told: "You're cancer-free. Good luck." Then she was lost. And of course we know that's not a unique situation. By some distance. Sanna was diagnosed with breast cancer at 43 in Finland—a country with universal healthcare considered among the best globally. She received treatment: chemotherapy, radiation, mastectomy, hormone therapy. Then treatment ended. And healthcare provided zero framework for what came next. Sanna is a Master of Science in Economics—analytical, logical, trained to solve complex problems. But logic wasn't enough to navigate the physical, emotional, psychological, and practical reality of life after cancer treatment. So over the following years, she trained herself: certified business coach, master coach, positive psychology practitioner, mindfulness-based cancer recovery trainer, NLP practitioner, solution-focused brief therapist. Years of training. Multiple disciplines. That's thousands of hours and no doubt euros too. And all to create what the healthcare system should have provided. She and her nurse friend Tiina wrote a book—a 13-step recovery program for women healing after breast cancer treatment. They wrote it because the book they needed didn't exist. Then she tried to re-enter the workforce with all this vast range of expertise in post-treatment recovery—expertise addressing a massive healthcare gap. And she's been rewarded with unemployment since March 2024, partly no doubt to the fragile economy in Finland at time of writing. But you could easily argue that the system that failed to support her doesn't value her attempt to fix the gap. In this episode, Sanna discusses: What specifically she needed when treatment ended that healthcare didn't provide Why her economics background and logical thinking weren't enough The 13-step recovery program she created and why each step matters Why it took years of training across multiple disciplines to navigate what should be standard care The unemployment reality despite expertise the system desperately needs What comprehensive post-treatment support should actually look like The Finnish healthcare context (if excellent systems still fail here, what does that mean globally?) This matters because healthcare treating cancer as diagnosis → treatment → done ignores everything that comes after. And people are either left to build their own solutions (if they have resources) or fall through the gap entirely. How can that be acceptable economically, socially or morally? This is #CancerCanDoOne—making sense of cancer when awareness isn't enough.   #MakingSenseOfCancer      
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5 days ago
20 minutes

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Cancer treatment ends. 'Now THIS is the hard bit...' Two women talk through their breast cancer reality.
The diary is empty. No more scans. No more treatment. That's it. You're good. So why do so many cancer patients feel depressed, abandoned and lost when surely it's time to celebrate?  In a first for #CancerCanDoOne, we eavesdrop on a brutally revealing conversation. This is the real and honest view of what breast cancer days are like and crucially what happens when the treatment ends. Because treatment is only one chapter in the story. Rebecca Perkins and Charmian D'Aubosson are friends. And they both know breast cancer. They got online for #CancerCanDoOne, spoke to each other and unpicked their revealing experiences so we could appreciate just a little more...   #BreastCancer #CancerTreatment #CancerAwareness #LifeAfterCancer 
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2 weeks ago
22 minutes

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
He was 30 and a gym owner. He'll never get cancer. Will he?
"I sat in the car for half an hour and cried."  His first thought; how will his new wife cope with this news? He was 30 years old with a life built on fitness and nutrition. He felt very alone. There weren’t many role models for young men facing cancer. Now, others reach out to him for advice — not about lifting weights, but about carrying the weight of a diagnosis. In this episode: How he went from patient to peer guide. The questions young men ask that no doctor prepares them for. What he’s learned about strength that has nothing to do with muscle. A story of unexpected leadership born from a brutal surprise.     #BreakTheCancerSilence #Testicularcancer #CancerAwareness #CancerCanDoOne
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1 month ago
21 minutes

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Five Siblings. All Before 60. Cancer Has a Dark Sense of Humour.
What happens when cancer doesn’t just hit one person, but an entire family? In this episode I speak with Anthony McLoughlin, one of five siblings who were all diagnosed with cancer before the age of 60 — a staggering and highly unusual family experience. Anthony shares how his family uses humour to cope, rarely talking about cancer unless it’s truly needed. He opens up about the loneliness and insecurity that can follow when treatment ends and healthcare professionals step back — the dreaded “Now what?” moment too many people face alone. We explore how cancer can pull families closer together, the small ways laughter helps survive fear, and the challenges of navigating life when the system goes quiet. This conversation is raw, honest, and occasionally darkly funny — a real insight into a family living with cancer in a way most of us can barely imagine.   ⏱️ Timestamps:   [00:58] Intro – Why this family’s story is so rare [03:41] Anthony’s family journey – how cancer brought the five siblings closer. Humour as survival. [05:58] Need to talk – when even they NEED to talk it through together. [13:08] When the system goes quiet – the loneliness after treatment ends. How for Anthony it lead to deep depression. About the guest:Anthony McLoughlin lives in London and is part of a remarkable family story that challenges how we think about cancer support. Trigger warning:This episode contains open discussion of multiple cancer diagnoses and the anxieties of post-treatment follow-up including depression. Listener discretion advised. 👉  If this episode resonates, share it with a friend who thinks cancer is never going to affect them. Who cares? Follow the show for more off-grid, human takes on life with cancer.   #BreakTheCancerSilence #CancerCanDoOne
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1 month ago
21 minutes

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
'A Better Man': How Incurable Prostate Cancer Remade Tony.
Tony Collier had it all—or so he thought. In his 60s, he was the embodiment of drive: building a business, checking every box for success, and clocking 60–70-hour workweeks. Then came the diagnosis: incurable prostate cancer. Life as he knew it stopped—and in its wake, something unexpected emerged. In this powerful, unfiltered conversation, Tony tells us how cancer forced a deep reordering of his priorities. How workaholism gave way to presence. How fear gave way to clarity. How facing mortality didn’t just change his life—it improved him as a man, a father, and a human being. If you’ve ever wondered what it means to live, not just survive, this episode is absolutely for you—for anyone who needs courage to say, “There has to be more to life.” Listen in for a story of resilience, reinvention, and redefining what matters most. Tony has no intention of making the same mistakes again...     #CancerCanDoOne #ProstateCancer #CancerAwareness  #BreakingTheSilence  #SexualHealth #CancerConversation
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2 months ago
23 minutes 24 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
When They Don’t Look, They Don’t Find: Beverley’s Story
When Beverley’s son Jake began having seizures, the diagnosis was always the same: migraines, epilepsy, stress. No one looked for a brain tumour. By the time they found it, life had already changed forever. In this episode, Beverley shares what it’s like to live in the aftermath—where her life is on permanent hold, watching for the next seizure, all because a system failed to look properly. This is not just a story about cancer. It’s a story about every family left picking up the pieces after a delayed diagnosis.
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2 months ago
22 minutes 39 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Cancer in Cameroon: What happens when care is out of reach?
What happens when you’re diagnosed with cancer but the nearest treatment is hundreds of miles away — and there’s no radiotherapy machine? When the cost of the most basic of treatment is way beyond what your community can afford.In this episode, I speak with a quietly remarkable oncologist working in Cameroon. Dr. Sarah Adiang Mouelle explains what cancer care looks like when equipment is scarce, costs are high, and awareness is patchy.  As a young oncologist she and a very small number of dedicated colleagues face a near catastrophic cancer situation with numbers only increasing. But this isn’t a story of helplessness — it’s about grit, workarounds, and refusing to give up, even when the system makes it hard. Sarah sees a future in the growing number of educated and engage young people who are more than prepared to stay and fight to make cancer care a right and not an option.It’s also a reminder: cancer is a global story. And it doesn’t end at your national border.  This is for all of us.  And it's about perspective...   #cancercandoone #cancerinafrica #cancerawareness #cancerincameroon    
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3 months ago
17 minutes 33 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
The Cancer System That’s Both Brilliant and Broken: A Norwegian Survivor’s Story.
What happens when cancer care is both the best—and the worst? In this honest, unfiltered conversation, Norwegian breast cancer survivor and doctor Patrycja Buxton (just not the medical kind) shares what it’s really like to go through a system that can be life-saving one day… and completely indifferent the next. We talk about: The shock of diagnosis in a country known for universal care What great healthcare actually feels like when it works The silence, stigma, and loneliness that medicine can’t fix Why geography can still decide who lives and who dies—even in a wealthy countryIf you’ve ever wondered how culture, systems, and humanity collide when cancer strikes, this episode will change how you see it. 👉 If this resonates, please follow the show and leave a quick rating—it helps others find these voices who deserve to be heard.
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4 months ago
24 minutes 53 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
What Cancer Took—and What Sarah Built in Its Place.
She knew something wasn't right. At all. But getting her fears recognised took far longer than anticipated. Time and again this mum in her 30s who'd just had baby number three was told she should really concentrate on the baby and stop worrying about her breast.  But she went back to her doctor again and again only to hear the same response.  Finally out of frustration on all sides Sarah Drake was sent for a scan. She had breast cancer... That was 12 years ago and now after a double mastectomy her life has moved on and cancer is her life in a positive way.  Today, Sarah runs a training company called Elephant In The Room that helps workplaces better support staff going through cancer. In this episode, she shares her story — one of deep pain, growth, and ultimately, purpose. It’s a conversation about what it means to heal, to forgive, and to turn something incredibly difficult into something meaningful.   _________________________________________________   Elephant In The Room Training: https://www.linkedin.com/company/eitrtraining/posts/?feedView=all    Follow Mike on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikekinnaird?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=android_app  
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5 months ago
22 minutes 35 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Cancer Tired v Fatigue. Andy knew the life saving difference.
Tired versus fatigue. Big difference.  Did I know that? Absolutely not. Thankfully Andy Mullaney realised that his 'tiredness' wasn't just overdoing it, or Covid jab after effects or just getting the other side of 60 years old. It wasn't going away and he could sleep as long as you like and still feel exhausted. He documented what was happening for a few weeks and so did his wife. So when he did go to the doctor he could present hard evidence of what was happening. Good job he did.  Andy wasn't tired. He hadn't realised his 'fatigue' was bowel cancer...   ----more---- Connect with Mike on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikekinnaird/   For more details of Andy's book: https://troubador.co.uk/bookshop/self-help/didnt-anyone-ever-tell-you-its-all-a-game Or contact Andy personally: a.mullaney@sky.com  
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5 months ago
23 minutes 25 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
But what if you’ve never seen breast cancer that looks like you?
Breasts are a private matter. Talking about them, touching them, exposing them to examination. Photograph them? No. Absolutely not comfortable with any of that. At all. That’s not what we do. And anyway. Breast cancer is a white woman problem  - so it doesn’t affect me, does it? Cultural conversations are just one part of the serious cancer conversation issue. The visual messaging relied on by much of the online and print media - even that of some charities - Invariably shows a white woman at a breast screening clinic. Rarely are those stock photos of a woman from black or Asian communities. What exactly are those women supposed to think if they don’t recognise themselves thanks to lazy and potentially dangerous content? Why would they..? Cancer presents itself differently, not all doctors know what to look for because it’s different to white skin, the images, culture, jargon and language - it’s a horrible mix of barriers that is still putting lives at risk. Which all sounds like a cliche mix until you talk with Dr Olubukola Ayodele. Bookie, as she calls herself, is a Consultant Medical Oncologist and heads the Breast Cancer Unit at the University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust in the UK. It’s a large, strong ethnic community. She’s also Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer at the University of Leicester. And along with very many published achievements and collaborations, she also sits on the European Cancer Organisation Inequalities Network. Bottom line is. She’s tired of women being diagnosed too late because no one told them what cancer awareness actually means to them. So, if anyone recognises the frustration, the inequality, the danger and the scale of the mountain still to climb, it’s Bookie Ayodele. She needs support herself - to get accurate information out there. There's a great deal to take in. Collectively, we can't keep ignoring this.  You can help right now by downloading and sharing this episode. Because the messaging on all sides is clearly very badly wrong.   _________________________________   More on Bookie Ayodele's research profile. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Olubukola-Ayodele-2   #CancerCanDoOne is part of the Louth Run For Life charity in the UK which has so far raised £855,000 for Cancer Research UK.   #breastcancer #breastcancerawareness #ethniccancer #ethniccommunity #cancervoice #cancerdisparity
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6 months ago
24 minutes 7 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Explain the cancer story to children. The 'Little C' legacy of Jen and Nic.
How do you explain what cancer is to children?  How to do that with facts they can understand, in an every day way they can follow and without frightening them? Jen and Nic meet by chance at a cancer convention. Jen is a teacher and designer and Nic a nurse. They hear suggestions made but they're not sure they're the answer. At all, in fact. Anyway, the two women keep in touch and that children-and-cancer thought keeps coming back.  There must be a better way? They had no idea they were about to create a lasting legacy with a series of bright, engaging cards which both parents and health professionals have raved about. The two friends had something else in common.  They were both married, had small children themselves and they had breast cancer.  Nic's husband Mat Owen picks up the story of that legacy that became - 'The Little C Club'.   ----more----   Find out more about the Little C Club here: Website:  Littlecclub.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thelittlecclub?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw== Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100048940663985    
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6 months ago
22 minutes 25 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Dale's life and family brutally changed by cancer in weeks - twice.
Dale was at the top of his game. Literally. A six foot 3, rugby playing, in-demand career-smashing, fiercely intelligent man with unlimited prospects.  The hours were madness and the workload immense but it was all about the future.  And that was on top of having an incredible, wonderful partner and two small children under five.  A family of love in those fabulous years when families slowly build, grow and enjoy new discoveries together every single day. It would be difficult to better this in many ways. And then life took hold. Out of nowhere, unwelcome, unannounced, it came with sheer vindictiveness.  In Dale's case it had been strongly hinting for some time that it had earmarked him for challenges that would break most people in days. Creeping up, its intentions unidentified. And then it happened. And it happened with a speed and force the rest of us could never comprehend. Dale’s partner, diagnosed with cancer. Dale is diagnosed. His mum dies. And this happens in a matter of weeks. The race was on to consume as much information, research, knowledge and science as possible, as quickly as possible. Hundreds upon hundreds of documents, trials and errors. This is Dale Atkinson’s story…       #cancercandoone #cancerawareness #cancerbattle #cancerfight #louthrunforlife #cancerresearchuk #cancerconversation #familylife #youngfamily #familystrength 
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7 months ago
25 minutes 35 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Sleep, Cancer And This 'New' Science We’re Still Unpacking.
We all know sleep is important. But if you have a chronic illness—or cancer—it's not just about feeling rested. Sleep plays a direct role in treatment effectiveness, recovery, and overall health. Lack of sleep affects so many of us in the modern world and the working life culture of the West doesn't exactly help. Fancy an afternoon nap at work? Ridiculous waste of time. Except it isn't. The opposite, in fact as you're about to hear over the next 20 minutes. The problem?  Culturally too many see sleep as a waste of time in certain situations. Plus, sleep science is still in its infancy, and resources in the UK are shockingly limited. In this episode, I sit down with Consultant Clinical Psychologist Dr Jill McGarry to break down the facts: why sleep matters more than you think, how poor sleep can impact some cancer treatments, and what practical steps patients can take today.   #cancercandoone #cancertreatments #poorsleep #lackofsleep #sleepscience #louthrunforlife #cancerawareness #chronicillness  
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7 months ago
22 minutes 58 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Cancer Meets Comedy, Autism Meets Medicine: Stories That Challenge With A Blog And A Book.
If cancer was a comedy, would anyone laugh? One of my guests thinks so—and his blog about incurable cancer proves it. But humour aside, today’s conversation goes deeper, exploring the intersection of late autism diagnosis, prostate cancer, and the blind spots in some healthcare understanding. Two men, two very different experiences—but both reshaping how we think about illness, identity, and how we tell our stories. Literally.
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8 months ago
23 minutes 15 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Don't Make That First Cancer Decision Today. Here's Why.
'I wish I had understood the risks more clearly.  My family made decisions they didn't fully understand...' This isn't a blame game, absolutely not - this is just life.  Everyone is doing the very best they can in a horribly difficult moment. There is a limited time to get a message across, options need to be outlined, recommendations made. And jargon and specific terms can be used, that in clever hindsight, we just didn't understand. It's a pressure cooker moment when suddenly you face the oncologist for the first time.  You listen as carefully as you can but emotions are swirling, concentration is fading. Should you ask a question? But...if you could, what should it be? Phil Richards MBE has been in that chair.  He knows first-hand when he was told about his incurable kidney cancer.  He was a young man, married had a very successful senior HR retail career and had a fulfilling life. He asked questions at that first meeting but now years down the line, he realises they were the wrong ones... So  - based on his considered experience - what should you do, what should you say and what are the consequences of saying...I'll just wait and see what happens next...   #cancercandoone #cancerresearchuk #louthrunforlife #kidneycancer #cancerquestions #cancermeeting          
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9 months ago
20 minutes 42 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
Can Food Fight Cancer? Prevention, Food Culture, and Choices.
What we eat can shape our cancer risk and treatment—and for those undergoing treatment, food can be a lifeline. In this episode, we explore how diet impacts prevention, why some cancer patients lose weight, and how food traditions in some cultures are evolving. So, from cultural habits to healthier alternatives, we uncover practical steps to take control of your health. Gina Geibner is an Advanced Specialist Oncology Dietitian with a clinic in Haddington East Lothian and an NHS job in Glasgow, Scotland, and Nevine  Baligh is a Non-Diet Health Coach with an MSc in Psychology in Cairo, Egypt. Listen now to rethink your plate and empower your choices.   ----more----  Please find out more about Nevine on her new website https://healthyish.me/   And Gina's website is here https://therehabdietitian.com/   More useful links https://www.royalsurrey.nhs.uk/dietandcancervideos/ https://www.macmillan.org.uk/cancer-information-and-support/stories-and-media/videos/prehabilitation-videos https://www.wcrf.org/ Helpline https://www.wcrf.org/living-well/living-with-cancer/cancer-and-nutrition-helpline/     Music Credits: https://www.dargolan.com/world-music #Uppbeat : License code: OV4JX0OUSXKVGKIK.   #cancercandoone #louthrunforlife #cancerresearchuk #foodandcancer #cancerdiets             
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9 months ago
19 minutes 23 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
What Not To Say To A Cancer Patient. And What To Say Instead.
'You're looking well. You know where I am if you need anything...'  All statements with the best of intentions from a good place.  But they are statements. They're not questions. We accidentally close the conversation down by never having a conversation in the first place. Didn't mean to, didn't want to upset you any more, is perhaps the thinking. Sharron Moffat will tell you there isn't necessarily a right or a wrong way to have that conversation. But it would be great if that patient - and we must never forget the caregiver - had a safe space to hear 'I bet this is really challenging for you. How are you feeling..?' So...what do I say to a cancer patient and the caregiver..?     ----more----   Music credits: Music: #Uppbeat : License code: OV4JX0OUSXKVGKIK Music: #Uppbeat: License code: 72NRLUXGF9BOFB8U #CancerVoices #HiddenHeroes #CancerCanDoOne #MentalHealthMatters #CancerCaregiver #CancerConversation #LouthRunForLife #CancerResearchUK
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9 months ago
20 minutes 47 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
A quick off-grid look back over 2024. Nipples, topless running, sex and cellos.
Stay with me; it’ll make sense in the end. Trust me.  Now, I’ve got to be honest. I couldn't have second-guessed some of the topics we've talked about on the #CancerCanDoOne podcast, which only began earlier this year… I imagined a cancer awareness agenda because you've got to start somewhere, and quite rightly, with audio projects like this, it’s the audience that decides on that agenda.  And it transpires the audience that was looking for a voice and support. So we'll refresh our memory with just a few of the conversations over our part of 2024. Three topics came up again and again in social media chats - breast cancer, prostate and menopause. And I suspect the same will apply in 2025.   Music: #Uppbeat : License code: OV4JX0OUSXKVGKIK. Additional music by kind permission of Alphonso Archer #cancercandoone #cancerconversation #HER2 #HER2breastcancer #cancerstories #breastcancer #cancerawareness #cancerresearchuk #louthrunforlfe #cancerpodcast #cancermaverick #oncologist  
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10 months ago
23 minutes 15 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird
How 'Kryptonite' is 'curing' cancer. Fake news, websites and other stories.
  Fake news, websites, 'kryptonite'. There's a sizable list to get through here. And since when has stress been a key factor in our cancer susceptibility? We're all stressed - a bit or a lot. Life can be a bit of a handful at times, and we know we need a bit of stress to keep us...well...aware; alert. Bystanders like me who simply don't know, for certain, the how and why answers to the above - and a very long list of other questions - need to get non-sugarcoated facts from the best. And one of the world leaders in the field - particularly in breast cancer - is UK-based, Dr Hugo De La Peña, MD, PHD, FRCP. Cancer Research UK Ambassador and Maggie's Clinical Lead. As Hugo says “Lifetime commitment: cure cancer in every patient” And here's how, for the most part, he's doing precisely that... Another download listening 20 minutes you won't regret. The #CancerCanDoOne podcast from Louth Run For Life.   Hugo's website https://www.drhugodelapena.com/   Music: #Uppbeat : License code: OV4JX0OUSXKVGKIK #cancercandoone #cancerconversation #HER2 #HER2breastcancer #cancerstories #breastcancer #cancerawareness #cancerresearchuk #louthrunforlfe #cancerpodcast #cancermaverick #oncologist    
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11 months ago
23 minutes 36 seconds

Making Sense Of Cancer #CancerCanDoOne With Mike Kinnaird