If you were diagnosed with breast cancer tomorrow, what choice would you make?
Could you live without breasts? Would you have a reconstruction? Would you pay extra for nipples? Or would you get nipples tattooed on?
Breast Cancer campaigns and initiatives have been super successful in raising disease awareness and promoting detection in Australia. But there is little awareness about the ongoing procedures, challenges, costs and complications that many breast cancer survivors face.
I spoke to 7 seven women who know about this in all of its gritty details.
Sally, 50, is an artist.
She was first diagnosed at 44 with tumours in her right breast. Her surgery required a right breast mastectomy which resulted in the removal of all 32 lymph nodes.
“I was not thinking of reconstruction at that point. I nearly lost my life, my house…I didn’t think about reconstruction until I had my left breast removed once it started thickening 18 months ago,” she says.
Unlike many women who incorporate reconstruction as part of their mastectomy, it wasn’t until Sally’s second breast was removed, four years after the first, that she commenced her reconstruction.
“Initially I had Stage 3, Grade 3 and secondary cancer. They told me if I didn’t have chemo I would be dead in three months. Also I had to go through 12 months of chemo, and a double mastectomy would have made it hard for me to heal.”