The Denver Post

CASSANDRA CALLENDER, FORCED TO UNDERGO CHEMO, DIES AT 22

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Cassandra Callender, who was forced by Connecticu­t courts as a teenager to undergo chemothera­py for cancer, has died after a fiveyear battle with the disease, her mother said Thursday. She was 22.

Callender, of Windsor Locks, died Tuesday at home, where she had been in hospice care for four months, Jackie Fortin said.

“The cancer never went away,” Fortin said. “They said they saved her life. They lied. She suffered for five years. It was horrific. If you did that to your dog, you’d get arrested.”

A judge in 2015 ordered Callender, known as “Cassandra C.” during her legal fight, to undergo chemothera­py for Hodgkin’s lymphoma. She had refused treatment, saying she didn’t want to poison her body.

She and her mother had missed several appointmen­ts, and doctors notified the state Department of Children and Families, which stepped in, according to court documents.

A juvenile court judge removed Callender, who was 17 at the time, from her home and placed her under guard in the Connecticu­t Children’s Medical Center.

Her case went to the state Supreme Court, which ruled in January 2015 that the department wasn’t violating her rights.

The case was argued under what is known as the mature minor doctrine, centering on whether Callender was mature enough to determine how to treat her cancer.

Connecticu­t’s high court found that Callender, who had run away during a home visit, demonstrat­ed she did not have the maturity to make her own medical decisions.

Doctors eventually implanted a port in her daughter against her will to administer treatment, Fortin said. She lived at the hospital for six months.

Callender disclosed in 2016 that a mass had been found on her lungs and that she would undergo alternativ­e treatments.

At that point an adult and able to make her own decisions, Callender eventually agreed to more chemo, immunother­apy and other treatments, but the cancer spread, Fortin said. “Some things work; some things don’t. Nothing always works. Neither is a guarantee,” she said. “That was the point we were trying to make all along. It should have been her choice.”

 ?? Stephen Dunn, Hartford Courant ?? Cassandra Callender arrives home with her mother in April 2015 in Windsor Locks, Conn., for the first time since undergoing court-ordered chemothera­py to treat cancer.
Stephen Dunn, Hartford Courant Cassandra Callender arrives home with her mother in April 2015 in Windsor Locks, Conn., for the first time since undergoing court-ordered chemothera­py to treat cancer.

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