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Mom, 25, Cries for Her Kids After Learning Breast Cancer Spread to Spine, Ribs, Lungs: ‘Hope I Get to See Them Grow Up'

Mom, 25, Cries for Her Kids After Learning Breast Cancer Spread to Spine, Ribs, Lungs: ‘Hope I Get to See Them Grow Up'

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Savannah Caldwell says she was 'so tired all the time' — the first symptom that something was going on with the 25-year-old newlywed — before being diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer
The mom of four explains that it has spread throughout her body, and she is sharing her journey online as she undergoes brutal, aggressive treatment
'I want to fight and I want to live,' Caldwell saysA 25-year-old woman is facing the unthinkable after being diagnosed with breast cancer that's metastasized throughout her body.
'Fatigue was the main symptom' for newlywed Savannah Caldwell, who told WSAZ-TV, 'I'm 25, I shouldn't be feeling so tired all the time. And extreme pain in my bones [that was] unexplainable. There was no reason [for it].'
Caldwell, who is raising four children with her husband Nick, found a lump on her chest and doctors ordered a biopsy this past spring. That's when she was diagnosed with cancer — stage 4 invasive ductal carcinoma. While it's the most common type of breast cancer, it generally affects women 55 and older, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
'I was in complete shock,' Caldwell said. 'I remember staring at the floor, not knowing what to think, not knowing what was next, that was a big worry. Worrying about my family, worrying about my life. I've grown up faster in a week than I have in 25 years.'
She started chemotherapy immediately — and began documenting her treatment journey on a Facebook page, Savannah's Breast Cancer Battle, and TikTok, Savishay14, to raise awareness as more women under 40 are diagnosed with the disease.
As she shared, 'the breast cancer has metastasized in my spine, ribs, lungs,' and doctors are testing to see if it's spread to her brain.
Her first chemo treatment took nearly 12 hours, she shared, and according to a GoFundMe established by a close friend to help her pay for treatment, Caldwell — who had tested positive for the BRCA gene, which means you're more likely to develop breast or ovarian cancer — is expected to undergo radiation and immunotherapy as well.
After her seventh chemotherapy treatment, Caldwell shared that she was recovering from a virus that caused her to become 'very ill and I dropped to 86 pounds … fatigue has set in a lot.'
The virus was debilitating, a friend shared in a Facebook update after Caldwell's eighth round of chemotherapy. 'Now the neuropathy has set in — her fingers and toes are tingling and numb. On top of that, she's dealing with extreme hot flashes that come in waves and leave her soaked, exhausted, and unable to sleep.'
The post continued: 'And as if that wasn't enough, she's still coughing up remnants of the infection she just battled. It's like her body just can't catch a break. But even with all of that… she's still here. Still fighting. Still holding on with everything she's got. And I couldn't be prouder of her.'
'For the most part, I'm optimistic. I want to fight and I want to live,' Caldwell told WSAZ. 'Being so positive isn't about living in denial — it's about being resilient, and I want to show that so much.'
'At night, especially when I'm with my kids,' she said. 'When we're cuddled up at night and I look over at my kids, I just hope I get to see them grow up.'
'I want my story to be a beautiful one no matter how long or short it is.'
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'I'm gonna die': Inmate described sharp pain before 'gruesome' jail death, lawsuit says
'I'm gonna die': Inmate described sharp pain before 'gruesome' jail death, lawsuit says

Yahoo

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'I'm gonna die': Inmate described sharp pain before 'gruesome' jail death, lawsuit says

The family of a Colorado man whose final minutes saw him cry for help as he was throwing up blood in a southwestern Colorado jail filed suit against the county and the jail's medical provider on July 21. The estate of Daniel Foard called the 32-year-old's 2023 death at the La Plata County Jail "gruesome and entirely preventable" in a complaint filed in the United States District Court for Colorado. "The final 15-plus hours of his life were dominated by terrible pain and suffering, including his expressed and doubtlessly terrifying consciousness of his impending death," the complaint reads. Jail cell video obtained by USA TODAY shows Foard throwing up coffee-ground like vomit and begging officers for medical attention. Foard died from acute peritonitis due to a perforated duodenal ulcer, according to the complaint. "We spend a lot of time thinking about deliberate indifference and it's a really, really hard concept to explain," Dan Weiss, one of the estate's lawyers told USA TODAY in an interview ahead of the filing. "This case right here is one of the clearest illustrations of that concept we have ever seen." The lawsuit names La Plata County, the county's Sherriff Sean Smith, the jail's medical provider Southern Health Partners, and eight nurses and jail employees as defendants. Ted Holteen, a spokesperson for La Plata County, told USA TODAY in a statement the "county has not analyzed the allegations made in the complaint" and that it does not comment on pending litigation. USA TODAY reached out to the sheriff and Southern Health Providers ahead of the filing and did not receive a response. "Our pain of loss is immeasurable, but we know that the path forward must lead to healing, to resolution, to something that allows us to take a deep breath and feel a sense of closure," Jim Foard and Susan Gizinski, Daniel's parents, said in a statement provided to USA TODAY. "Without any accountability for what happened to our son, there can be no closure." Boulder jail death: Colorado family sues after man dies from infection in jail in his 'blood and vomit' August 2023: Daniel Foard enters La Plata County jail Foard was booked into La Plata County jail on August 11, 2023. He was being held on warrants for failure to appear, a jail supervisor told the Durango Herald at the time of Foard's death and the estate's lawyers confirmed in the interview. Foard told nurses at the jail that he regularly took fentanyl pills during the intake process and was placed in the jail's detoxification program. During his time in the program, he had some vomiting and diarrhea that soon went away. But an elevated heart rate, fast breathing and high blood pressure continued, according to the complaint. During a routine body scan around 9:45 p.m. on Aug. 15, 2023, before he was to be moved to general population housing, Foard collapsed to the floor multiple times, according to the complaint. The complaint alleges that a jail deputy mouthed to another that Foard was "faking." Denver police recruit recalls 'hazing': 'I'll never be the person that I was' Later that night, nurse Ashley Box concluded that Foard was stable and could be transferred to general population. He was moved to the jail's G block, according to the complaint. USA TODAY reached out to a publicly listed phone number for Box and did not receive a response. Deputies tasked with escorting Foard told Box that he was "really struggling." Box responded by asking, "what do you think?" The complaint alleges that Box did not go to see Foard or relay his condition to a doctor. 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It alleges the symptoms reported by Foard required Snooks to call a doctor, and that she did not. "Ten-out-of-10 sharp, shooting, and persisting abdominal pain is unquestionably a serious medical emergency. These symptoms mandate immediate provider involvement," the complaint reads. USA TODAY reached out to a publicly listed email for Snooks and did not receive a response. Foard was moved by Snooks to the jail's booking area for medical monitoring. The complaint alleges the medical monitoring never happened. "Snooks did not even communicate with any of the Deputies why Mr. Foard was being moved back to be monitored," the complaint reads. "The next time a nurse came to see him he was dead." Daniel Foard's final hours Foard was placed in Holding Cell 4 around 7 a.m. on Aug. 16 and continued vomiting through the day. By 6 p.m., Foard was moved to Holding Cell 5 due to vomit in the first cell. Snooks left the jail in a shift change around 6 p.m., with Box coming on duty. 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Family reveals shocking details of what really happened in fatal Long Island MRI accident

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Why COVID Spikes in the Summer, and How to Stay Safe
Why COVID Spikes in the Summer, and How to Stay Safe

WebMD

time28 minutes ago

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Why COVID Spikes in the Summer, and How to Stay Safe

With cases climbing again, you might be wondering why a "winter virus" keeps returning in the heat, and what you should be doing right now to protect yourself. "A couple of months ago, experts were uncertain about a summer wave," said Jodie Guest, PhD, an epidemiologist at Emory University in Atlanta who has tracked COVID since the start of the pandemic. "The low levels of respiratory illness in spring 2025 and stable variant landscape suggested a quiet summer." But three key indicators now have COVID watchdogs sounding the alarm: a new virus strain, increasing wastewater levels, and emergency room visit upticks in parts of the U.S. The CDC now lists the "COVID-19 epidemic trend" as growing or likely growing for more than half of U.S. states. The strongest indicators were seen in Arkansas, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia. Here's what to know about summer COVID, and how to protect yourself – especially if you have a summer vacation or travel coming up. I thought COVID was a big risk during flu season. Did something change? No, COVID has always had two waves, about six months apart – one in the summer and the other at the height of winter "respiratory season," when flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) also rage. The winter wave typically peaks sometime between "December and February, coinciding with colder weather and increased indoor gatherings," said Guest, senior vice chair of the Department of Epidemiology at Emory's Rollins School of Public Health. "Summer waves have occurred sporadically, often driven by new variants or waning immunity." 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