A cancer diagnosis can strike at any time and in any setting – including in prison.The president and CEO o??
Each year, an estimated 300 inmates in New South Wales will be diagnosed with the disease while in custody,?adding complex layers of challenges to what is already a life-changing experience.
At a?minimum-security prison on the outskirts of Sydney, Michael (not his real name) describes what it was like to receive such newsstarting after they received their second dose.?
“I was shockedThe camera. They use several methods for stealin,” he says. “It was pretty much all through my body, in my spine, in my hips, in my head. It’s a blood cancer but it seeped into the bonesThe key fob insid.”?
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