Why do I campaign hard with advocacy, awareness and education on asbestos issues plus give support to those living with an ARD (asbestos rel...
Why do I campaign hard with advocacy, awareness and education on asbestos issues plus give support to those living with an ARD (asbestos related disease including mesothelioma) and to their families including those who left to pick up the pieces when their loved one dies from an ARD?
The simple answer is because I care. I am not angry because it would stew inside me and myself, in turn, would shrivel up and die of anger at asbestos greed. I care - no one should ever have to go through the brutal pain and suffering as a victim, and no one should ever have to watch someone they love go through this either. It is a preventable disease/cancer caused by asbestos greed - not by us! My darling dad died of pleural mesothelioma (working in the building industry) in 1985 aged 54 years. He lasted just a few months and in that time he was in so much pain, agony and on 24/7 oxygen - all because he went to work and did his job well! Since then I have been aware of the deadly dangers of asbestos fibres and had spoken out to warn others working with asbestos products of the dangers. Then when I was finally diagnosed in 2003 with peritoneal mesothelioma and later in 2009 with pleural mesothelioma the crusader in me came to the forefront! How dare asbestos greed continues to take innocent lives and wreck beautiful families! Crusader fights for cancer drug - Star Weekly Newspaper 7 Dec 2015
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A Gisborne woman who has spent 12 years battling mesothelioma is urging the federal government to add a revolutionary, but costly, medication to the pharmaceutical benefits scheme.
Despite her ill health, Louise Williams has spent many years fighting on behalf of others diagnosed with lung cancer caused by exposure to asbestos.
Mrs Williams said that before starting a new medication, Keytruda, in April this year, she couldn’t get out of bed.
‘‘I was dying,’’ she said. ‘‘I needed oxygen 24/7, I had severe back pain, bone pain, nausea … my body was shutting down.’’
In 1985, her father, who worked in the building industry, was diagnosed with pleural mesothelioma. He died six months later aged 54.
In 2003, Mrs Williams, then 47, was diagnosed with peritoneal mesothelioma. In 2009, it became pleural mesothelioma. She has had large tumours removed, and she underwent many courses of chemotherapy before starting on Keytruda.
Mrs Williams said her life had been transformed after 12 doses of the drug, which encourages the body’s immune system to fight tumours.
‘‘It doesn’t kick in immediately, but after the third dose my scan showed significantly reduced tumours and fluid,’’ she said.
‘‘After numbers four and five, I started to ease up the oxygen and was walking better and doing basic household things.
‘‘Between five and six I thought, well, what’s wrong with me?
‘‘My quality of life is back. I’m able to do everything I used to be able to do.’’
But Keytruda, which is listed on the PBS for melanoma but not for asbestos cancers, doesn’t come cheap.
Depending on body weight, a single dose can cost between $6000 and $11,000, and it must be administered every three weeks.
‘‘At the moment it’s usually prescribed at the end of life because it’s so expensive,’’ Mrs Williams said. ‘‘I believe once it’s on the PBS, oncologists will be able to try it earlier.’’
Keytruda is getting results with more than 20 different cancer varieties around the world.
‘‘With mesothelioma it’s showing a success rate of 60 to 70 per cent,’’ Mrs Williams said. “Chemotherapy is about 20 per cent. Everyone should have this option.’’
The efforts of Mrs Williams, who has spoken at several international conferences, were recently praised in Federal Parliament by McEwen MP Rob Mitchell.
‘‘I do not think I have met a person with such great inner strength and courage,’’ he said.
‘‘We will keep fighting to help her and hopefully other victims get the support and medication they need to help them lead full lives.’’
Mrs Williams, who hopes to present a 6000-signature petition to Health Minister Sussan Ley soon, said she believed victory was near.
‘‘We will get it done,’’ she said. ‘‘I know we will.’’
A spokesman for Ms Ley did not respond before deadline.
- See more at: http://www.starweekly.com.au/news/crusader-fights-for-cancer-drug-2/#sthash.kTAEQVy9.dpuf ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- My campaign at the present moment is to get Keytruda fast tracked on to our PBS (Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme) for each infusion will be free rather than the expensive costs at the moment. With Mesothelioma we do not have time to wait for the length of usual time it takes for a drug to be submitted and approved. With Keytruda already on the PBS for Melanoma the benefits are being shown already in many cases of Melanoma (the recent case being Jimmy Carter former President of USA.) http://www.nbcnews.com/health/cancer/heres-look-keytruda-drug-jimmy-carter-says-made-his-tumors-n475561
Jimmy Carter credits the new cancer drug Keytruda for shrinking his brain tumors completely. It's one more possible victory for the newest class of cancer drugs that empower the immune system to fight off tumors. But cancer experts note that it's not at all clear that the drug itself is what shrank Carter's tumors. The former president was also treated with radiation to his brain and had a large tumor on his liver removed.
While most immune therapy drugs boost the immune system so that it can battle the cancer, Keytruda was the first drug to take a different approach that disrupts a trick tumors use to hide from immune cells. The Food and Drug Administration gave Keytruda accelerated approval in 2014 for patients, like Carter, whose melanoma has spread. It was on the basis of a big study that showed Keytruda could shrink the tumors of about a third of patients by as much as 90 percent.
Dr. Antoni Ribas of the University of California Los Angeles led that trial. Ribas says between 70 and 80 percent of the patients whose tumors shrank on Keytruda are still continuing to see their tumors shrink.
"That's what we expect from the immune system," he said.
Kathy Thomas of Torrance, California, was one of them. Thomas went from being in a wheelchair to walking three miles a day. She'd tried other immune therapies such as interleukin and a drug called Yervoy, but the side-effects made her sick.
And her cancer kept coming back. She started Keytruda in 2012 and felt the effects after two rounds of treatment.
"My hair is back and I am fat and happy," she said. Thomas celebrated her 60th birthday this year by traveling to South America and the Caribbean. She's not cured, but says tumors on her liver shrink after every new round of treatment with Keytruda.
"There needs to be a category of cancer patients like me. I am not cancer-free but I am surviving with it and basically doing well,"she said.
Lou Williams, a mesothelioma sufferer, is campaigning to get the lifesaving drug, Keytruda, on to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. Picture: Kylie Else Sunbury/Macedon Leader Newspaper 5 December 2015
LOU Williams has been fighting to stay alive for the past 13 years, with her body finally “shutting down” in April this year.
“I was on oxygen 24/7 and high doses of morphine for chronic bone pain,” the New Gisborne woman, 60, said.
“I was having blood transfusions to stay alive, although I was really receiving palliative care.”
Then Mrs Williams heard about Keytruda — an extremely expensive drug that had shown some promise treating mesothelioma (asbestos cancer).
“I didn’t want to die,” Mrs Williams said.
“So my husband and I decided we’d give it our best shot and paid for the treatment on our credit card.”
Doses of Keytruda cost between $6000 and $11,000, with several rounds of treatment needed before its effects can be assessed.
“At first, I was still shutting down and continuing to lose weight,” Mrs Williams said.
“Then after eight weeks and the third round of treatment, scans showed significant shrinking of my tumours.
“By number five I didn’t need oxygen anymore and by round six I was walking around by myself again.”
Mrs Williams continues to receive doses of the drug every three weeks and is determined to make Keytruda accessible to others suffering asbestos poisoning.
She was exposed to asbestos as a child in the ’70s playing with fibro sheeting offcuts. Her father died from pleural mesothelioma in 1985.
Mrs Williams’ change.org petition, which has so far attracted more than 5900 signatures, is calling for Federal Health Minister Sussan Ley to have the drug fast tracked on to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS), bringing the cost down to around $36 per dose.
Keytruda was approved for use in Australia for the treatment of advanced melanoma in adults in April 2015.
Mrs Williams’ campaign has attracted international attention, drawing support from mesothelioma sufferers around the world, and has been backed by McEwen federal Labor MP Rob Mitchell, who spoke on the issue in Parliament last month.
“(Keytruda) is well out of the price range of most people,” Mr Mitchell said.
“That is why we have been working with Lou to encourage the pharmaceutical company that makes Keytruda to apply to the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) and the PBAC to have the medication listed. There is no time to waste.”
A spokeswoman for Keytruda’s manufacturer, Merck Sharp & Dohme (Australia) Pty Ltd, said rare cancers were difficult to research due to fewer people enrolling in clinical trials and this could delay applications for registration and reimbursement.
“The recent Review of Medicines and Medical Devices includes recommendations that could accelerate the regulatory approval of medicines, including medicines to treat rare cancers,” she said.
“MSD is fully supportive of any policy changes that would improve access to treatments for rare cancers.”
A Federal Department of Health spokesman said it would be improper for the Minister to comment on the merits of an application that first needs to go through an independent scientific assessment process.
He said the TGA and the PBAC would accept a submission to extend the TGA registration and the PBS listing of Keytruda at any time, but sponsors cannot be compelled to apply for expansions of the scope of existing TGA registration and PBS listings.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Lou's comments: I am just one of many global warriors who in unity help to make a difference.
PGARD (Parliamentary Government Asbestos Related Diseases Board members Senator Lisa Singh and Senator Russell Broadbent had a meeting with our Health Minister, Hon Sussan Ley recently to talk about Keytruda, my campaign and fast tracking it onto the PBS. A successful meeting and the next step is for me to meet with the Health Minister to present the petition with over 6,000 signatures. This petition is not about generating numbers of signatures/supporters it is about the 6,000 genuine people who passionately want to see Keytruda put on the PBS for Mesothelioma and eventually the 29 other rare cancers it is showing promise with.
Enough of talk - we need action as no one with Mesothelioma can afford to wait!
12 days in beautiful sunny and warm Queensland2 weeks since last chemo and feeling good!2014 Alan Reinstein award (ADAO)26 June 2013.30 April 2014 Oncology visit for results of recent scans - not the best result!4 Aug 2013a beautiful warriorA brave and beautiful mesothelioma warrior's funeral 18 June 2013A week of heartache thanks to deadly asbestos!acne pimples zits skin conditions alternative health natural healingaddictionADFA Asbestos Diseases Foundation of Australia Business cards have arrived!Another beautiful moment in my life! Monday 5 July 2013ANZAC DAY - Australian and New Zealand Army CorpsArticleAsbestAsbestosasbestos cancerAsbestos Cancer Melbourne Gala Dinner 2013 Biaggio Signorelli Foundation 1st Annual Melbourne Gala Dinner to raise funds to create 28 July 2013asbestos cancer mesotheliomaAsbestos cancer survivor in international award article (Lou Williams)asbestos deathasbestos diseaseasbestos dust inhalationasbestos home testingAsbestos Home Testing- Prevention Is Better Than CureAsbestos Safety Conference - International Conference Asbestos Awareness and Management Nov 2014Asbestos Settlement- The Grim RealityasbestosisAsbetosisASEA International Asbestos Management ConferenceASEA International Conference Melbourne 1 to 18 Nov 2014 and goodbye to a beautiful warriorattorneyAustraliaAustralia flying visit to attend Asbestos Safety & Eradication Agency WorkshopAustralia on 14 June 2013Australia SHAME!!Australia's 1st International Conference on Asbestos Awareness & Management 16 to 18 Nov 2014Australia’s 1st International Conference on Asbestos Awareness and Managementawareness and education on asbestos issues?Ban Asbestos in Unity - Greens Beach Tasmania 21 March 2014Ban asbestos! It kills! 5 sleeps until Washington!Barry Robson (ADFA) award and ADAO Tributes for 11th annual asbestos awareness conference.Blood transfusion and Vampire alert!Burns & InjuriesBusy Christmas festivities and Keytruda No. 13 overnight in hospitalBusy SydneyCancercancer cure lung mesotheliomacancer from asbestosCancer mesotheliomacancer tumorCatching up with familycausecause of diabetesChemo day 8 turned the corner finally!Chemo postponed after scan resultsChemo tomorrow!!! New grandchild and home again! Prize winning mesothelioma book a must to read!Chemo yesterdayChemotherapyChemotherapy day 14Chemotherapy todayChildren's Health IssuescisplatinClassic carsComputer literate again! High tea and good bye to a beautiful mesothelioma warrior and dear friend.courageCrystal Bay Gold Coast holiday Queensland and scanxiety!CT scan and waiting for results/further chemo!cure mesothelioma lung cancerDay 7 Chemo slowly coming good!Day 7 of chemo and starting to feel sane!Day 8 on Chemo regime Alimta/Carboplatin and Trial by local Council NSW to end illegal dumpingDC 2 April 2014 ADAO's 10th annual asbestos conferenceDeath and dying talk at University and my CT scans todayDebbie Brewerdevelopment of disease. ChemotherapyDiabetesdiabetes controldiabetes recipediabetes travelDiane and Brionydiffuse malignant pleural mesotheliomadiseaseDrugsEnjoying Tasmania's slower paceextreme gale force winds and rain damaging parts of AustraliaFeeling relaxed in between chemotherapyFiberFiresfitness equipmentfloodsFlu gone! Life is good! Asbestos events for November 2014friends and social media for making it so special!friends and those whose lives have been touched by asbestos. 19 April 2013Great Gisborne Gazette Nov 2014Having fun in between treatments!health careHealth Forumholiday Gold CoastI am off to Canberra as a keynote/guest speaker to talk with our PoliticiansinspirationalKeith's blog on being a carer/husband with me living with Mesothelioma and having treatmentKeynote speaker Canberra to PoliticiansKeytruda - Mesothelioma Australia wonder drug!Keytruda and Mesothelioma in Australia 19/10/2015Keytruda for Mesothelioma overnight no. 14 and walk in the park!Keytruda miracle mesothelioma cancerKeytruda no. 17 and successful meeting with PBAC to fast track Keytruda on to PBS.Keytruda shrinking tumours for mesothelioalaw firmsLife is good!Linda Thomas April 2013liposomalLisa Singh asbestos scourge needs Commonwealth leadershipLiving in between treatments with mesothelioma. Surprise pirate birthday party!!Living with MesotheliomaLou is back! On wonder drug Keytruda!Lou is fighting fit ... almost! James Hardie asbestos fund to be topped up by NSW GovernmentLou's CT scan results of peritoneal and pleural mesothelioma 30 July 2014Lou's health updateLou's radiation course finished. Lou almost back on board!Lou's recent scan results after radiation and closer to an asbestos ban in USAlovelunglung cancerLungLeavin'Day Heather Von St. James 2 Feb 2014Lungsmalignantmalignant mesotheliomamalignant mesothelioma diagnosismalignant mesothelioma lawyerMalignant mesothelioma prognosisMalignant pleural mesotheliomamedicmelonMerry Christmas and turning the corner!MesotheliomaMesothelioma - Keytruda amazement!Mesothelioma and asbestosis nutritional/quality of life study Qld University 1 July 2013mesothelioma and lung cancerMesothelioma attorneyMesothelioma Australia Lou Keytruda drug shrinking tumoursmesothelioma cancerMesothelioma cancer oncology visits/resultsMesothelioma CancersMesothelioma cureMesothelioma DiagnosisMesothelioma Griefmesothelioma helpMesothelioma lawsuitsmesothelioma lawyermesothelioma lawyersMesothelioma progression and a kick up its butt!Mesothelioma scans tomorrow and ASEA Asbestos International Conference BrisbaneMesothelioma Survivor Lou Williams Steps Up Her Drug Advocacy EffortsMesothelioma SymtomsMesothelioma Treatmentmesothelioma treatment.Mesothelioma Warrior continues her fight!Mesowarriors high-tea Brisbane Nov 2015My autumn weekend in the Macedon Ranges 26 and 27 April 2014My birthday celebrations and thank you to familyMy trip to WashingtonNewsOlivia Newton-John Cancer & Wellness Centre radiation appt and catch up with AmandaOncology appt Fri 5 July 2013Oncology results 24 April 2013Oncology results and a day in the city of Melbournepainpain controlpalliative carePalliative care assessment and scan results tomorrowPalliative diagnosis and care for mesothelioma 2 July 2013pancreatic cancerpatientspemetrexedpericardialpericardial mesotheliomaperitonealPET scan 30 Sept 2014PET scan results and passing of a warrior friendPet scan Weds 31 Aug 2013pleuralpleural mesotheliomaPleural mesotheliomaspoetryPrevention of mesotheliomaPrognosisquality of lifeQueenslandradiation therapyRadiotherapyRemembering Anita Steiner a true social media mesothelioma warriorResults of my PET/CT scanRIP 29 year old Michael Bradley lost his battle with mesotheliomaSarah 20 yrs old diagnosed with deadly Mesothelioma (asbestos cancer) fighting for her life!Saying goodbye to a beautiful lady who lost her life to mesothelioma in MelbourneScan results - all is well! Thank you for your support.screeningscreening asbestos-exposedserous membraneserum osteopontinspeaking and my award.Strength to fight mesothelioma. Channel 9 video putting home renovators at risk of asbestos exposure with reckless ads.surgerysymptomsSymptoms of Mesothelioma CancerSymptoms of Mesothelioma CancersTargomiRs treatment first stage late 2013 Australia (ADRI)Tasmanian Examiner newspaperterminal diagnosisterminal diseaseTravelling to Tasmania and arriving safely.treatmentTribute to a beautiful warrior Jan Egerton and living life with mesotheliomatrue storyTumorsUpdate on LouUtube presentation ADAO and on Managing C'tee World Asbestos Congress 2015 Pakistan.VictoriaVoice for asbestos victims - my storyWashington DC Asbestos (ADAO) global conference speech March 2013We say farewell to 2 Aussie warriors who have lost their lives to deadly mesothelioma.weekend away and chemo tomorrow!Weekend of winter weather in Macedon RangesWestern Australian man caught dumping asbestos illegally fined!What are Mesothelioma Cancers?What Is Asbestos?Who is in danger from carcinoma cancer?Why do I campaign hard with advocacywinds and snow - 4 seasons in 1World Health Organization
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learning mesothelioma: Why do I campaign hard with advocacy, awareness and education on asbestos issues?
Why do I campaign hard with advocacy, awareness and education on asbestos issues?
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