{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/6884be8a3781311f9174ddcc/6a0c725d4c1aeb32e7035c35?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"#171 Pamela Deasy | Trusting Her Gut: A Pancreatic Cancer Survivor Story","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/6884be8a3781311f9174ddcc/1779199136950-a124e625-287c-4ff5-851a-f5e386845844.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Pamela Deasy was in her early 40s, working full time and volunteering with the RNLI, when fatigue started dragging her back into bed in the middle of the day. Her bloods were clear. She was told it was perimenopause, then depression. Months passed before a kinesiologist, of all people, pointed at her pancreas — and within days she was in a Cork hospital being told she had a tumour.</p><p><br></p><p>In this episode, Pamela sits down with Laura to walk through what happened next: the chemotherapy that made her legs turn to jelly, the five and a half weeks of daily radiotherapy that put her on her back in hospital, and the Whipple surgery that took out the head of her pancreas, part of her stomach, part of her intestine, her gallbladder and her spleen. Then the slower, quieter battle that came after — the seven and a half stone she lost, the survivor guilt nobody warned her about, the Survive and Thrive programme that helped her step back into the world, and the small camping toilet she now keeps in her car because that is the honest reality of life after Whipple surgery.</p><p><br></p><p>Pamela also shares why she co-founded Pancreatic Cancer Ireland, what the signs of pancreatic cancer actually look like, and why \"listen to your gut and keep going back\" might be the most important sentence you hear this week.</p><p><br></p><h3>🔑 Key Points</h3><p><br></p><ul><li>Why fatigue was Pamela's only consistent symptom — and how easy it was to put down to a busy life, perimenopause and then depression</li><li>The signs of pancreatic cancer worth knowing: persistent tiredness, pain in the tummy that radiates to the back, floaty stools, dark urine, jaundice, an itch with no rash, new pre-diabetes</li><li>What Whipple surgery actually involves, and why it is described as life-saving but life-altering</li><li>The realities of life after a rewired digestive system, from packing a change of clothes to always knowing where the toilet is</li><li>The chemotherapy side effects that have lingered for years — neuropathy, Raynaud's, cold intolerance</li><li>Survivor guilt, the drop-off in support after the \"all clear\", and finding her way back through the Survive and Thrive programme</li><li>Why pancreatic cancer is projected to be the second leading cause of cancer-related death by 2030</li><li>Pamela's everyday philosophy: advocate for yourself, listen to your gut, and treasure the ordinary days</li></ul><p><br></p><h3>📚 Resources</h3><p><br></p><p><a href=\"pancreaticcancerireland.ie\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><strong>Pancreatic Cancer Ireland</strong></a></p><p><a href=\"https://surviveandthrive.ie/about-survive-and-thrive/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\"><strong>Survive and Thrive</strong></a></p><p><br></p><h3>⏱️ Timestamps</h3><p><br></p><p>00:00 — Welcome</p><p>00:27 — Blackrock Health Women's Health Centre</p><p>01:34 — Introducing Pamela and trusting your gut</p><p>02:13 — 2018: fatigue, busy work and the RNLI</p><p>03:04 — Going back to the GP again and again</p><p>05:01 — A kidney scan and \"the good news is there's no cancer\"</p><p>06:00 — Being told she might be depressed</p><p>06:16 — A kinesiologist who pointed at her pancreas</p><p>07:17 — Jaundice and the alarm bell</p><p>08:51 — Friday 7th December: into hospital in Cork</p><p>09:22 — \"You have a tumour in your pancreas\"</p><p>12:02 — What Whipple surgery actually is</p><p>13:00 — Six rounds of chemotherapy</p><p>13:30 — Side effects: falling, neuropathy, Raynaud's</p><p>17:48 — Radiotherapy, gemcitabine and six weeks in hospital</p><p>21:51 — Whipple surgery on 15 August 2019</p><p>23:20 — What was removed during Whipple</p><p>24:17 — Losing seven and a half stone and severe cachexia</p><p>26:14 — Ascites and the slow road back</p><p>29:48 — From patient to survivor</p><p>30:23 — Survivor guilt and finding therapy</p><p>31:11 — The Survive and Thrive programme</p><p>31:38 — Life after a rewired digestive system</p><p>34:55 — Pancreatic cancer statistics in Ireland</p><p>36:00 — The signs and symptoms worth knowing</p><p>42:00 — Setting up Pancreatic Cancer Ireland</p><p>47:58 — Where to find Pamela</p><p>49:25 — Advice for younger people, and the meaning of life</p><p>51:38 — Blackrock Health Women's Health Centre</p>","author_name":"Laura Dowling"}