Sunday Mirror

WE’RE BACKING TRUST THAT GIVES Join our Christmas appeal to help teens like Molly 2018 Christmas Appeal

Make sure all the kids are alright

- BY AMY SHARPE

CANCER is terrifying at any age, but for a young person it brings its own set of tough and unique challenges – as teenager Molly Trevor knows only too well.

At just 15 she became one of the thousands of 13 to 24-year-olds in the UK who are diagnosed with the disease during those special, vulnerable and formative years.

For Molly, gruelling treatment for non- Hodgkin’s lymphoma while friends studied for GCSEs and posted their social lives online proved lonely and isolating. Her illness meant she was in hospital last Christmas – so frail she was in a wheelchair.

But thanks to support from the Teenage Cancer Trust, Molly was treated alongside other patients her age by specialist nurses in comfortabl­e, sociable facilities.

It made such a difference. And that is why the Sunday Mirror Christmas Campaign is this year supporting teens and young adults getting cancer treatment through the festive season. We’re asking our readers to donate to the charity and back its #GiveAnHour appeal to raise cash for specialise­d nurses and support workers.

Molly, who is almost 17, is now in remission. She said: “I was shocked when I was diagnosed. One minute I was preparing for Year 11 and the next I had six rounds of chemo, spending 180 nights in hospital.

SUPPORT

“On top of the illness I had a massive fear of missing out as all my friends were on social media posting what they were doing. I couldn’t have fun. I won’t forget the support from the Teenage Cancer Trust. We were separated from the babies and young children and able to hang out with others our age in a fun environmen­t.

“The friendship­s I made with other patients were so important. We supported one another.” Molly is not alone. Around seven young people aged 13 to 24 are diagnosed with cancer every day in the UK. Which is why this campaign is so vital.

Liz Tait, director of fundraisin­g at the charity, said: “We are delighted to have been chosen as the Sunday Mirror’s Christmas campaign.

“Christmas should be a time for family, friends, laughter and celebratio­n – not cancer. Thousands of young people are facing it, and the Teenage Cancer Trust will make sure they have all the support they need.”

For Molly, of Spalding, Lincs, the charity’s work is priceless. She said: “The charity’s nurses had more time for me than nurses on other wards as they weren’t always rushing about. They’d sit and chat with me. And the support worker would organise things for us.

“Last December we made decoration­s, helped put lights up and did other activities.”

Molly was diagnosed with her illness – which hits white blood cells and the immune system – in August 2017 after struggling to eat. She spent six months undergoing chemothera­py at the Teenage Cancer Trust unit at the Queen’s Medical Centre in Nottingham. The charity has funded 28 specialist units, offering a home for young people. Some have bedrooms with TVs, DVDs, laptops and games.

During her time on the ward, Molly contracted sepsis and spent five days in an induced coma. She was also diagnosed with type 2 diabetes last December. She was discharged before Christmas, but on December 23 developed an infection and was admitted to her local hospital, only to be let out late on Christmas Day.

Molly said: “I couldn’t walk. I was so

people first, cancer patients second – and I am always struck by their lust for life. Half of 13 to 24-year-olds with cancer still don’t get specialist care designed for them.

“Vital support like this will help us move closer to a time when every young person who wants Teenage Cancer Trust support can get it.” tired I can barely remember it. It was miserable.”

The teen – who lives with her parents Ian and Silke, both 51 – had physio to rebuild the strength to walk and got the all-clear in February. Despite missing a year of school she passed her GCSEs and is now doing A-levels in health and social care, chosen because of her experience. She says: “I am so grateful to the Teenage Cancer Trust. Everything’s looking much brighter.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? SUPPORT Roger Daltry
SUPPORT Roger Daltry

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom