Jamaica Gleaner

Mom, daughter fight cancer together

- Jonielle Daley/Gleaner Writer

JAMAICA-BORN ANDREA Ajibade was diagnosed with bilateral breast cancer one month before the completion of her daughter’s chemothera­py treatment.

In July 2018, she underwent a routine mammogram at a healthcare facility in Cape Town, South Africa, before returning home to her family in Nigeria, when doctors discovered stage one cancer in her left breast and stage two in the right.

“I was absolutely devastated . ... Everything was waiting for me, my husband and the other three kids,” said the 54-year-old.

“... The first couple of weeks was horrible because I had to hide it from my children.”

Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths among Jamaican women, a fact that may have rested on Andrea’s mind days after its discovery.

Her daughter, Montunrayo, was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2017.

Montunrayo’s ordeal started as a mild headache and climaxed when she collapsed at school. Because her condition was critical, she had to undergo immediate surgery at a public hospital in Nigeria as the doctors warned that she would not have survived a move.

“I think that this girl is the one that gave me strength because she was confident that she was going to be healed,” said Andrea in sheer admiration of her daughter’s strength.

The mother-daughter duo has been fighting cancer prayerfull­y. They have since moved to England.

Andrea underwent a double mastectomy and is in remission. As a strong Christian, she declares herself healed.

Montunrayo had a relapse in March 2020. The family faced down a bleak prognosis as the tumours spread. One doctor intervened - a decision that triggered a turnaround in her fortunes.

Montunrayo defied the odds and has since resumed classes while undergoing chemothera­py. The tumours have shrunk.

The 16-year-old told in a phone interview that her family’s support has helped her to hurdle every new challenge. And that has spurred her to offer advice to other parents to hang tough with their kids during cancer.

“You should not give up on the child. Provide the child with as much support and love as the child needs,” the teenager told The Gleaner.

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Pallbearer­s trek with a coffin to the May Pen Cemetery in St Andrew after a hearse broke down on Spanish Town Road on Wednesday. Funerals have been banned to curb the risk of coronaviru­s spread but burials are allowed with a 15-person limit.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Pallbearer­s trek with a coffin to the May Pen Cemetery in St Andrew after a hearse broke down on Spanish Town Road on Wednesday. Funerals have been banned to curb the risk of coronaviru­s spread but burials are allowed with a 15-person limit.

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