cancer Documentary on PBS This Week

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AnneW
AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
edited June 2014 in Life After Breast Cancer
cancer Documentary on PBS This Week

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  • AnneW
    AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
    edited April 2008

    Check your listings for Wednesday, April 16.

    THE TRUTH ABOUT CANCER PREMIERES ON PBS APRIL 16, 2008

    Emmy Award-Winning Filmmaker Linda Garmon Takes on the
    Question "How Far
    Have We Come in the War on Cancer?"

    News Journalist and Cancer Survivor Linda Ellerbee
    Hosts Post-Broadcast Panel Discussion

    What is the truth about cancer? Is it the same deadly
    killer it was 30 years
    ago - or are we making progress? Find out through the
    poignant stories of
    patients battling the disease. Written, produced, and
    directed by
    award-winning filmmaker Linda Garmon, The Truth About
    Cancer premieres
    nationally on PBS Wednesday, April 16, at 9:00pm ET
    (check local listings).
    Comprised of a 90-minute documentary followed by a
    30-minute panel
    discussion, the two-hour broadcast event takes a deep
    look inside the cancer
    field gauging how far we have come in this decades-old
    war and asking, "Why
    does anyone still die of cancer?"

    Part science, part personal catharsis, part
    character-driven storytelling,
    The Truth About Cancer is narrated by Garmon, who
    tells the moving story of
    her husband's battle with cancer. Over the course of
    the film, Garmon
    returns to the same Boston-area hospitals at which her
    husband was treated,
    and exposes startling truths about survival rates of
    metastisized cancers,
    and the limited success of drugs and clinical trials.
    Interwoven throughout
    are the stories of three additional cancer patients,
    and their families and
    doctors, as they navigate the deeply personal
    decisions surrounding the
    disease. The documentary also follows several medical
    professionals working
    to promote screening, research the latest developments
    in cancer treatment,
    and help patients and their families live with a
    cancer diagnosis.

    "This film makes it clear that it's very much a part
    of American culture to
    believe that if you fight hard enough, you can beat
    cancer. But when it
    comes to having metastatic cancer, your survival
    depends on the biology of
    your cancer cells, and whether they are susceptible to
    state-of-the-art
    treatment," says Garmon. "In sharing my husband's
    story and the stories of
    other patients, I hope to shed light on this important
    truth."

    The Truth About Cancer is the third installment of
    PBS's Take One Step-a
    campaign offering primetime programming and outreach
    tools to help people
    take the first step towards better health. Following
    the 90-minute
    documentary is a 30-minute panel discussion entitled
    Take One Step: A
    Conversation About Cancer with Linda Ellerbee. News
    journalist and breast
    cancer survivor Linda Ellerbee moderates the dialogue
    featuring a panel of
    doctors, all of whom are cancer survivors themselves.
    Having sat on both
    sides of a cancer diagnosis, the panel shares their
    unique perspectives,
    offering both personal and professional observations
    on how to handle a
    cancer diagnosis, what to say to loved ones, how to
    advocate for yourself,
    and how to best live your life, with cancer. Panelists
    include U.S. News and
    World Report health editor Dr. Bernadine Healy; breast
    cancer surgeon and
    Breast Cancer Research stamp mastermind Dr. Ernie
    Bodai; neurologist and
    leading palliative care expert Dr. Richard Payne; and
    counseling
    psychologist Dr. Paul Brenner.

    The Truth About Cancer is a Carousel Films LLC

    Anne

  • Paulette531
    Paulette531 Member Posts: 738
    edited April 2008

    WOW! That really looks interesting...thanks!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited April 2008
    This is sooooooooooo true:  This film makes it clear that it's very much a part of American culture to believe that if you fight hard enough, you can beat cancer. But when it comes to having metastatic cancer, your survival depends on the biology of
    your cancer cells, and whether they are susceptible to state-of-the-art treatment,"
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited April 2008

    Thanks for sharing this...I will definately watch it. 

    Rock...I agree...and would like to add:

    It's also very much a part of American culture to believe that cancer - "is just a part of life"...when in way too many cases it's the opposite.

    The mentality of "if you fight hard enough, you can beat cancer" is sad and it's also a state of denial.

    Does this mentality mean that those who don't survive didn't fight hard enough! Absolutely NOT!

    I hope this film helps dispel this "mentality".

  • abbadoodles
    abbadoodles Member Posts: 2,618
    edited April 2008

    Sounds interesting but I think I am all cancer-ed out.

    Tina

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited April 2008

    I would love to watch this but I don't think my DW could handle it LOL.

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