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Wales Online
Wales Online
Orlaith Clinton & Nisha Mal

Sisters lose husband and best friend to 'silent killer' disease

Two sisters took part in an enduring challenge of cycling 480 miles in two days to raise awareness of a disease that killed two people very, very close to them. The disease, known as 'the silent killer' claimed the lives of one sister’s husband and the other’s best friend.

Andrea’s husband, Paddy Harrower came up with the idea for the challenge just five days before dying. Doctors told Paddy he had pancreatic cancer on Easter Sunday last year (April 17 2022), and tragically died 14 weeks after his diagnosis on July 24 - his symptoms included indigestion and pain in the upper abdomen.

Wanting something positive to come out of his terminal illness, Paddy challenged his wife and sister-in-law to take on the endurance event to support local pancreatic cancer charity NIPANC. The money Andrea and sister Cathy Booth raised was in memory of Paddy and Cathy's school friend Natalie Wilson, who died aged 40.

Speaking to Belfast Live, Andrea, a personal trainer said: "Cycling was so important to Paddy, his self-devised challenges and other official events at home and abroad. He used the bike to get to work and on family holidays.

"During his illness he set himself his own challenges as a reason ‘to get out of bed until the day he died.’ As a family, we and our two sons, Fraser, 19, and Alex, 15, and my sister and brother did a final ride out from home with him only a couple of weeks before he passed away.

"His motto was 'I’m not living with cancer; cancer is living with me and I’m taking it for a ride'." While cycling, the sister adopted the NIPANC charity slogan #TimeMatters, to encourage people to understand the symptoms of the disease and seek early diagnosis and treatment.

They also had a hashtag called #IBlamePaddy, Andrea explains: "#IBlamePaddy came about when people started finding out he was terminally ill. Friends and family felt they had no excuse but to join in some of the things he was doing including cold water swimming and kayaking. I don’t think he realised the impact he had on people.

Andrea and family (Handout)

"He was a modest man who wouldn’t like too much attention, but we think Paddy would be secretly pleased that the hashtag can be used by anyone fundraising to literally blame him on any crazy thing they do, to raise money and awareness for this important cause.”

Cathy, a former Director at BDO who now runs her own business consultancy said: “Within five years, I not only lost Paddy, an incredible brother-in-law but also one of my school friends Natalie of 30-years to this devastating disease. Andrea and I are on a mission to raise awareness and fund vital research so other people don’t have to go through what we have.

"We want as many people involved in fundraising as possible and will be talking to schools, rugby and cycling/sports clubs along the route about how they can be part of our journey and #IBlamePaddy too. For us, this had to be an endurance challenge, given what we have both personally experienced.

"We know, no matter what physical and mental distress and pressure we put on ourselves during this challenge, it is absolutely nothing compared to what someone on a pancreatic cancer journey is facing.

Cathy and school friend Natalie, who died aged 40 (Handout)

NIPANC’s Chairperson, Ivan McMinn MBE said: "We will be supporting Andrea and Cathy every push of the pedal on this epic cycle around the perimeter of NI. The difficulty of this challenge cannot be underestimated but the good it will do will be enormous. On Friday, may the road rise to meet you and the wind be at your back."

The first audit in over ten years into pancreatic cancer in Northern Ireland has revealed there has been an 86% increase in confirmed cases, rising from 152 in 2001 to 283 in 2020 since a previous audit was carried out in 2001.

The audit published in May was funded by NIPANC with the audit work undertaken by the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry (NICR), Queen’s University Belfast in partnership with HPB clinical staff in the Belfast Trust.

Its findings have prompted Mark Taylor, NI Director of the Royal College of Surgeons and Consultant Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Cancer Surgeon to call for a strengthening of local pancreatic cancer services as ‘incidences are likely to continue to rise’ due to multifactorial reasons such as ‘increasing age, obesity and diabetes.’

The audit measures the pathway of pancreatic cancer patients during 2019 and 2020 in secondary (hospital) care and is the first audit of pancreatic cancer services in the UK since the pandemic. It will help to inform the soon to be established pancreatic cancer audit in England.

Mark, also a Trustee of NIPANC said: “We can see on the ground, how pancreatic cancer referrals are increasing, and we must strengthen our services in response. "It is concerning the most common route to diagnosis was via emergency admissions (43%) and the majority of patients presented with advanced (Stage 4) cancer where the cancer has spread to a distant site. This underpins the importance of continuing in all our campaigning efforts to raise awareness of early signs and symptoms to enable timely diagnosis and treatment."

Pancreatic cancer symptoms include, jaundice, yellowing of the skin and eyes, changes to taste and toilet habits. For more information on other symptoms, or how to get support, please visit here. Please click this link to donate to the fundraising appeal.

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