
By Pam McGaffin
Her
first oncologist told Donna Peterson she had two to six months
to live. End of discussion.
Shocked members of the Bellingham woman's family, who had come
to the appointment with her, asked if there wasn't something,
anything Donna could do to fight her lung cancer and prolong
her life.
The doctor's answer came as an aftershock. Almost four years
later, a still-alive Donna likes to quote it frequently: "She
can take Flintstones vitamins if she thinks it will do any good,"
the doctor said.
Her husband, Darrell, sister, Verna, niece, Veronica, and granddaughters
Jamie and Julie all left that appointment in tears. Donna was
too numb to cry.
It wasn't until later, after talking to her grown children,
that the 70-year-old great grandmother became convinced there
had to be an option to giving up. Then she saw a television
advertisement for a cancer center in Seattle, and decided to
call.
At her first appointment at Seattle Cancer Treatment and Wellness
Center, an oncologist and a naturopathic physician told her
they couldn't cure her, but they could manage her cancer like
a chronic disease.
Donna and her family could live with that. "I thought, there's
hope," she says. "I'm not a goner."
This time she and her family left the doctor's office smiling
and went out to dinner to celebrate.
Donna started weekly chemotherapy treatments at the Center in
October 2004, and has since cut back to every other week. The
smaller, more frequent doses help minimize side effects. Her
oncologist, Dr. Nick Chen, also adjusts the mix of drugs every
three months to maintain the therapy's effectiveness.
In addition to Chen, Donna also sees two complementary care
providers at the Center: Chinese medicine practitioner Darin
Bunch for acupuncture, and naturopathic physician Heidi Lucas
for dietary supplements and nutritional guidance.
The complimentary therapies are designed to further minimize
the side effects of the chemo, while boosting her body's strength
and immune system.
"I've learned to like kale," says Donna, who has changed her
diet to include more dark green vegetables, fish and fish oil,
and green tea, while eliminating refined sugar and red meat.
She didn't need a doctor to tell her to quit smoking. She was
already down to one or two cigarettes a day before she was diagnosed,
but she stopped completely after her first oncologist gave her
that months-long death sentence.
Her pack-a-day habit started as "a social thing" in her early
20s. "Darrell was in the Air Force, and his friends would come
over," she says. "Everybody smoked but me. I started with one
after dinner and before long, I was hooked."
Both she and Darrell have been nicotine-free for almost four
years now. Their healthy living, combined with Donna's multi-approach
cancer care has her beating the odds.
"Donna is the type of patient who utilizes everything, particularly
nutrition," says Lucas, her naturopathic physician. "She has
wonderful family support and an amazing sense of humor. She's
also very dedicated, and that's what can make the biggest difference."
Given her experience, Donna now urges everyone to get a second
opinion. "Your doctor is not God," she says.
More than three years after her time was supposed to be up,
Donna walks two or more miles every day, maintains a large garden,
goes RVing with her husband, and babysits her young grandson
every Friday. (When she dons a wig to go out on her walk, her
grandson insists on wearing one, too.)
In the time she thought she wouldn't have, Donna and Darrell
have laughed and cried and celebrated many a family milestone,
including their own wedding anniversaries and birthdays.
When you've been married 51 years and have two children, three
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren, she says, every
day matters.
Seattle Cancer Treatment and Wellness Center is an affiliate
of Cancer Treatment Centers of America, a network of hospitals
that integrate oncology with complementary and natural therapies.
For more information and cancer-fighting tips, call (206) FOR
HOPE (367-4673) or visit www.seattlecancerwellness.com.
Pam McGaffin of Moore Ink. PR, writes articles
about important health, family and community issues for non-profit
organizations.