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Keyword: hodgkinsdisease

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  • Was Jane Austen Murdered?

    02/09/2012 9:41:41 PM PST · by BlackVeil · 28 replies
    ABC News ^ | Nov 14 2011 | Luchina Fisher
    Nearly 200 years after Jane Austen‘s untimely death, crime novelist Lindsay Ashford has come up with a new explanation: arsenic poisoning. Austen, the English author of such classic novels as “Pride and Prejudice” and “Sense and Sensibility,” died in 1817 at age 41. Her death has been attributed to everything from cancer to Addison’s disease. But Ashford, who moved to Austen’s village of Chawton three years ago and started writing her new crime novel in the former home of Austen’s brother, stumbled across another possibility — that Austen died of arsenic poisoning. ... Ashford recognized that Austen’s symptoms could be...
  • Teen with cancer can forgo chemotherapy

    08/16/2006 8:08:37 AM PDT · by presidio9 · 72 replies · 1,217+ views
    A 16-year-old cancer patient 's legal fight ended in victory Wednesday when his family's attorneys and social services officials reached an agreement that would allow him to forgo chemotherapy. At the start of what was scheduled to be a two-day hearing, Accomack County Circuit Judge Glen A. Tyler announced that both sides had reached a consent decree, which Tyler approved. Under the decree, Starchild Abraham Cherrix, who is battling Hodgkin's disease, will be treated by an oncologist of his choice who is board-certified in radiation therapy and interested in alternative treatments. The family must provide the court updates on Abraham's...
  • Abraham vs. Hodgkin - Is a 16-year-old wise enough to decide to skip chemotherapy?

    08/03/2006 9:37:54 AM PDT · by neverdem · 37 replies · 882+ views
    Reason ^ | August 1, 2006 | Cathy Young
    Should the government intervene to save the life of a 16-year-old boy, even if it means forcing him into medical care against his and his parents' wishes? This is the question at stake in the case of Starchild Abraham Cherrix, a teenage boy who has Hodgkin's disease, a cancer of the lymph nodes that is highly treatable if diagnosed early. After completing chemotherapy, Abraham learned earlier this year that the cancer had returned. The boy decided to forgo further chemotherapy (the first round had left him severely nauseated and so weak that he could barely walk at times) and...