Their
mission: Making a difference
(continued)
Demas
thought the worst was over. Then two more malignant bumps appeared
on her calf.
The
five-year survival rate for melanoma drops dramatically once it
has spread to a distant site, as it had in Demas' case.
Demas
and Goodnight sat down to discuss alternatives, including having
her leg amputated - although even that wouldn't guarantee a cure,
since it takes only one errant cell to escape and metastasize. Goodnight
recalled a clinical trial he had participated in as a resident surgeon.
It was a type of biology therapy in which live tuberculin virus
is injected into tumor sites and into lymphatic regions under the
arms and in the hips. The virus boosts the patient's immune system
so that it can attack the cancer cells, and the tumors self-destruct.
For
two years, Demas went to the UC Davis Cancer Center for weekly treatments.
Slowly,
the tumors melted away. In 1995, she heard words she had been longing
to hear: "I think we're ready to stop treatment now."
It's been three years since her last therapy and five years since
her last occurrence of melanoma. Demas is officially in remission.
During
her battle with cancer, Demas held a high-level job managing investment
portfolios for retail clients at Wells Fargo Bank. She was even
promoted to assistant vice president during her illness. But her
brush with death had changed her.
"Once
you find out there's a possibility that you might die from cancer,
you wonder what would people will remember you for," Demas
explains. "I enjoyed my job, but it didn't give me enough of
a chance to really make a difference in the world."
Demas
had also remarried since her treatment, and with the encouragement
of her new spouse, retired from banking and joined the Executive
Board of Advisers. When the Regional Development Leaders group was
formed, she jumped at the chance to join.
"I
was given the opportunity to do something I had always wanted to
do: give something back."
Not
everyone needs to have survived cancer to know its devastating impact.
Esther Armstrong was in the doctor's office when her aging mother
was diagnosed with terminal cancer. She's seen her sister and several
in-laws battle the disease.
Armstrong,
like Demas, had a very successful career. Before retiring in 1993,
Armstrong - a long-time associate with the California fair industry
- managed the El Dorado County Fair and the National Orange Show
in San Bernardino. She also served as assistant director of the
California Department of Food and Agriculture, overseeing the state's
81 fairs. A past member of the Board of Directors of the Western
Fairs Association, she was named to the association's Hall of Fame
in 1989, is a past president of the International Association of
Governmental Fair Agencies, and served on the Board of Directors
of the International Association of Fairs and Expositions.
Helping
to raise awareness of the need for cancer research is a form of
enlightened self-interest, she says.
"As
the population gets older, the numbers of Americans who get cancer
will also grow," says Armstrong. "If you want to join
the fight against cancer and you want advances in prevention and
cures, then you need to go to where the source is - where the research
is."
Under
Armstrong and Demas' leadership, the volunteers of the Regional
Development Leaders have made great strides. They've published a
quarterly newsletter on cancer events, recruited docents for a patient
resource center, and met with volunteer fund-raisers at Mercy Hospital
and Health Services in Merced. The UC Davis Cancer Center has affiliated
with Mercy Hospital and Health Services and the Fremont-Rideout
Health Group in Yuba City/Marysville and will develop other community
hospital affiliations to build a network of regional cancer centers.
The
group is also planning a major gala in November to raise money for
cancer research.
"Everybody
thinks there is plenty of money for cancer research, but when you
get involved, you see how little the government is spending on it,
especially when you consider how many people are affected by cancer,"
says Armstrong.
The
Regional Development Leaders are looking for a few good volunteers.
If you'd like to make a difference, call (916) 734-9617.
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