In recognition of UNMC’s support for the Research Means Hope campaign, UNMC Today posed the following question to several people — “How does research mean hope to you?”
Jim Fagin |
Fagin’s life was saved earlier this year when UNMC surgeon Jean Botha, M.D., performed a cutting edge “Whipple Procedure” to remove the cancer. Fagin — who calls himself a “walking miracle” — is back at work and fully engaged in his active lifestyle.
Below he answers our question.
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After falling ill in the summer of 2009, I was in and out of hospitals for three months with no diagnosis. Finally, I went to UNMC where, in three weeks, they found what was wrong with me. I had pancreatic cancer; a frightening illness very few survive because it is usually discovered too late for treatment. In my case, they caught it in time and today, more than a year after becoming ill, I am cancer-free.
I owe my life to the dedication and expertise of medical professionals and their research but more needs to be done in order to save the lives of many more people. A routine test must be developed to spot pancreatic cancer in its early stages so it can be treated and defeated.
This is a wonderful testament to the importance of research as well as a call to arms, so to speak, to continue to fund research to find simple means of early detection for diseases as well as possible treatments and hopefully cures.
Mr. Fagin is a true to life testament of what happens when innovation and tenacity meet. A true inspiration for individuals and their families who are battling pancreatic cancer.
RIP Jim Fagin