Interview 41  

Interview 41

Age at Interview: 41
Sex: Female
Age at Diagnosis: 11
Background: Nurse, married with three children aged 16, 14, 10. Ethnic background: White British.

Brief outline:Hodgkin's lymphoma diagnosed in 1976 after she developed a lump on her neck. Chemotherapy put her into remission. Afterwards she contracted shingles and needed skin grafts and hair transplants because of severe scabbing on her scalp.

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Female
Was never told how potentially serious her illness was and the word 'cancer' was never mentioned. She felt this helped to give her a positive attitude to her illness.
 
Went on a school walking trip and managed all the walking, was very tired and hadn't realised how much the chemotherapy had sapped her energy.
 
Was treated when a teenager and never told that she might become infertile so was not anxious when later trying to get pregnant and produced three beautiful, healthy children.
 
Chose a nursing career because she had been in and out of hospital in her teens, got to know the young nurses well and enjoyed watching them working.
 
Wearing a wig in her teens made her withdrawn and she had no relationship until she was 18; her first boyfriend was understanding and helped her to accept it.
 
Her parents had protected her by covering up how potentially serious her illness had been when she was a teenager; she realised only later how hard it had been for them.
Jenni Murray - Cancer
Lymphoma
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