Photo program at Sick Kids Hospital helps teens with cancer express hopes, fears
TORONTO — What does cancer feel like? Look like? For most teens, cancer is a foreign word, a disease adults may have to deal with but one most adolescents don’t connect with themselves.
Not so for Salome Oliveira dos Santos, 16, who knows what it is to have cancer and go through treatment. Last summer, after she developed mysterious lumps in her neck, she was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a malignancy that primarily affects the lymphatic system.
From the end of September until December of last year, Salome underwent chemotherapy at Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children and was off school until February.
“I felt very alone, no one in my family had ever been through chemo,” she said. “I didn’t know anyone I could relate to.”