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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
Entertainment
Gemma Jones

This Morning's Julia Bradbury explains 'hardest thing' about cancer diagnosis

Julia Bradbury has revealed some of the difficulties she faced when being diagnosed with cancer.

The 51-year-old appeared on ITV's This Morning today to talk about her upcoming documentary showing her health journey so far. She announced last September that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer and needed urgent surgery. Six months later the TV presenter is still undergoing treatment.

Tonight, on April 28, ITV will be showing her cancer journey in a new documentary film - Julia Bradbury: Breast Cancer and Me. In an interview with Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby, the presenter told of how difficult it was to tell her family about her diagnosis.

READ MORE: Julia Bradbury shows journey of breast cancer battle in new ITV film

Speaking of Julia's children, Phil asked: "What was it like telling them?" Julia replied: "Telling your children you have cancer is the hardest thing you'll ever have to do in your life. You also don't quite know how much to tell them to be realistic and how much you need to protect them as well. It's a really tricky balance. I don't think any parent really knows exactly what to do."

Julia also delayed telling her mum about her diagnosis. She said: "I delayed telling my mum because she is a Greek, loving, gorgeous, warm parent who has tried to protect us. Even to this day I still have to phone her when I get somewhere. That's the kind of mum she is. I knew that if I told her 'look, I've got a lump, they've done a biopsy and it's cancer' then she would want to know oh what's happening next.

"She would definitely want to come and live and move in with me straight away. I knew it would be a huge worry for her at that bit of the journey, so I wanted to get to the stage where I knew what kind of cancer it was and I knew what treatment it was going to be and I knew what my chances of recovery were going to be so I could genuinely sit down with her and tell her all of the information that I knew so that she wasn't worrying along with me."

The film will tell Julia’s personal story as one in seven women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime in the UK. It will follow her both before and after her mastectomy - seeing her family through the process of physical and psychological recovery, as well as meeting other families facing similar struggles.

Julia said: "I wanted to make this documentary to help spread awareness about this pervasive disease that now affects one in seven women. There was so much I didn’t know about breast cancer before my diagnosis and I hope this helps highlight the complexities of our individual cases, as well as exploring some of the incredible support networks that are out there and the new science and knowledge that continues to evolve."

She added: "The impact of a cancer diagnosis goes way beyond the initial devastating news and the ripple effect on those close to you is crushing.”

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