Antelope Valley Press

Isolated at home, woman connects by giving

- By LUIS ANDRES HENAO Associated Press

Even as she fights cancer and struggles with a rare lung disease, Corinna Dewar thinks of helping others.

In past holiday seasons, she would bake cookies for some of her neighbors in a suburb of Sacramento, California, and drop them off at their doors. Amid the pandemic, she gave them Santa-decorated care packages of sanitizing products instead.

She’s housebound, so her husband helped deliver some of them and she mailed the rest. Giving back to others was especially important in 2020, when she underwent treatment for skin cancer.

“Finding and sending products to friends and family helped me stay connected to them,” she said. “And it gave me a small way to help out and focus on something other than my health and the pandemic.”

Dewar was diagnosed with lymphangio­leiomyomat­osis — also known as LAM — a decade ago. For some years, she continued her job as a social worker and later counseled homeless people. When the disease advanced, it became a struggle to even walk a flight of stairs. She began to use an oxygen tank, and she prepared to undergo a lung transplant.

“And I thought, OK, now’s the time to stop doing the active volunteeri­ng, but just finding little ways to help if I can,” Dewar said.

Dewar removed herself from the waiting list for an organ donor last May because hospitals were overwhelme­d by the COVID crisis and she felt it wasn’t the right time for a transplant. Two months later she was diagnosed with skin cancer and had a tumor removed from her foot.

Doctors have told her that she won’t be able to get back on a waiting list for a transplant for more than four years, because medication she would take after the operation would feed the melanoma.

Still, she remains hopeful and grateful for her life. And she continues to believe in the importance of looking out for others, even more so during the pandemic.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Corinna Dewar prepares care packages of sanitizing products to give to friends, family and neighbors at her home in Carmichael, Calif. In past years Dewar and her husband have made and delivered cookies, but this year they decided due to the pandemic that giving necessitie­s like cleaning supplies would be safe and practical.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Corinna Dewar prepares care packages of sanitizing products to give to friends, family and neighbors at her home in Carmichael, Calif. In past years Dewar and her husband have made and delivered cookies, but this year they decided due to the pandemic that giving necessitie­s like cleaning supplies would be safe and practical.

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