The Northland Age

Cancer patient’s plea: ‘Get seen, get checked’

- By Peter de Graaf

Don’t be whakama¯ (shy) — see a doctor and get yourself checked if you think something’s not right.

That’s the message from a Northland family after Whitinga Harris was diagnosed with stage 4 colon cancer.

Harris, from O¯ taua, near Kaikohe, was just 31 when he was diagnosed late last year during his final weeks of a three-year teaching degree.

By the time the cancer was found it had spread to his stomach, requiring a major operation to remove a 2kg tumour, and now it has reached his liver.

Chemothera­py is expected to keep the cancer at bay for about another seven months, but after that his outlook is bleak. Specialist­s say his best chance of more time with his sons, aged nine and 12, is the unfunded drug Keytruda.

His family is now franticall­y trying to raise the $100,000 required. A Givealittl­e campaign has now raised more than $28,000. Last Thursday, when the Northern Advocate ran an earlier story about Harris’ plight, the total stood at $18,000.

Whatever happens, Harris and his wha¯ nau hope they will be able to help others by encouragin­g them to seek medical help early.

”We hope to spread awareness of bowel and colon cancer, among young people especially. A lot of them are going under the radar,” he said.

Harris had always kept good health so when he was diagnosed he hadn’t seen a doctor for about 10 years and didn’t even have a GP. He never dreamt he’d get cancer at the age of 31.

Family spokeswoma­n Ruby Grace said it was important to see a doctor if something wasn’t right.

“People can be whakama¯ (shy) because the symptoms of colon cancer can be a bit embarrassi­ng. They don’t want to see a doctor and say, ‘I’ve had diarrhoea for a year’, they just manage it. Our message is: Get seen, get checked.”

Since his diagnosis Harris said his family had learnt a great deal about cancer and cancer treatments, and wanted to share that knowledge with others going though similar experience­s.

”We want to keep the ball rolling, even if I do pass on. It’s not just us, there’s lots of people suffering, and I feel sorry for them.”

Go to givealittl­e.co.nz/cause/fromgradua­tion-to-hospital-gown if you want to donate.

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