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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Tim Hanlon

Coffee lover tells how sipping the drink led to him finding out he had cancer

A coffee lover has told how he found out he had cancer after sipping the drink and suffering sharp pains at the back of his throat.

Train driver Michael, 58, said he used to "live on" coffee during work shifts but it was in July, 2021, that he had the pain while drinking and he went for a check up where he found he had throat cancer.

He started to feel tired just walking up a street and went through three months of "aggressive" treatment.

Michael had 35 sessions of radiotherapy and three cycles of chemotherapy, and was hospitalised twice before getting the all-clear in February 2022.

"Being a train driver is the best job; it makes you feel alive every day. But in July 2021, my world turned upside down. I lived on coffee, but drinking it had started to give me sharp pains at the back of my throat. I got checked out and it was the worst-case scenario – throat cancer," he said.

Michael suffered pains in his throat while drinking coffee (Leeds Hospitals Charity)

Michael, speaking to Leeds Hospitals Charity, continued: "As soon as I was diagnosed, the treatment clicked into place. I was really poorly, admitted to hospital twice and because of Covid I had no visitors. I had a feeding tube which I found really difficult.

"After treatment, I couldn’t walk to the top of the street, but slowly I began to build my strength back. I was looking forward to going back to work, when in April, I had a pulmonary embolism. It was the worst pain. I thought I was dying that day. The NHS saved my life."

He added: "Looking back, I saw how incredibly lucky I was to survive it all."

Michael is now taking part in a 10-hour walk for Leeds Hospitals Charity "as a way of saying thank you".

"I’m now training for a 10-hour fundraising walk for Leeds Hospitals Charity as a way of saying thank you to all the incredible people who kept me alive. I just want to do anything I can to help them, to help pay for that extra equipment they need. It was hard being so ill, but I can’t praise the hospital staff highly enough." he said.

Professor David Sebag-Montefiore, academic clinical oncologist at the University of Leeds, said: "The Leeds Cancer Centre is more than just a hospital for Leeds. We are one of the largest comprehensive cancer centres in the country, caring for patients across Yorkshire. We offer a specialist cancer service and world-leading research, while also providing emotional, physical and psychological support for our patients and their loved ones.

"Around 250 people a week come to our hospitals to be given a diagnosis of cancer. Our teams do everything they can to support every patient and their families during this incredibly difficult time. Cancer is a disease that touches all our lives. Although cancer survival has doubled over the last four decades, we want to go further and accelerate progress to make the biggest difference for our patients."

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