Mom Convinced Daughter with Cancer to Reject Chemotherapy, Family Claims. She Died 7 Months Later
The sons of prominent U.K. conspiracy theorist Kate Shemirani are blaming their sister's death on their mother's anti-science views
Gabriel and Sebastian Shemirani told the BBC news program Panorama that their sister Paloma died from non-Hodgkin lymphoma after refusing chemotherapy for the illness, a decision they believe was influenced by their mother
Kate has blamed Paloma's death on a cover-up, and in response to the Panorama episode, posted on social media, "Let them all fall on their swords. My silence has been for a reason our silence as her parents has been for a reason"The sons of prominent anti-vaxxer and conspiracy theorist Kate Shemirani have blamed the former nurse for the death of their sister, her daughter Paloma, who died in 2024 after refusing chemotherapy for cancer.
In a Monday, June 23, interview with the BBC news program Panorama, Gabriel and Sebastian Shemirani said that while growing up in the English town of Uckfield, their mother believed that the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center was an "inside job" and that the Sandy Hook school shooting was staged.
When their mother was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2012, the ordeal fortified her anti-science views, they said — and while Kate underwent surgery to remove the cancer, she credited her recovery to juices and coffee enemas.
Although Gabriel and Sebastian stopped speaking with their mother after their parents split, Paloma — Gabriel's twin — remained in contact with her. As Sebastian told the BBC, 'Paloma's strategy was to appease, to be sweet, to try and win the love that she hadn't been granted earlier.'
When Paloma was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in late 2023, she was given a positive prognosis — 80% chance of survival — with chemotherapy; without it, the BBC reports, the cancer could be fatal.
However, BBC reported that once Kate visited her daughter in the hospital, Paloma decided against chemotherapy, opting to treat her cancer with Gerson therapy, which involves juices, supplements, and enemas, and is not an approved treatment for cancer, the National Cancer Institute notes. No studies have been done that support the belief that it's an effective cancer treatment, according to the NCI.
Paloma's mother supervised her care, the BBC reports; in July 2024, she was put on life support following a heart attack. A few days later, Paloma had died at 23 years old.
Kate responded to Paloma's death by proclaiming in posts on X that she had been murdered and that her death had been covered up. 'Medicine is a lie and what we once believed to be healthcare is now a homicide service,' she wrote, later calling her daughter's death 'one big massive manslaughter case.'
Sebastian placed the blame for his sister's death squarely on his mother, and told the BBC, 'My sister has passed away as a direct consequence of my mum's actions and beliefs. And I don't want anyone else to go through the same pain or loss that I have.'
Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
PEOPLE has reached out to Kate for a comment.
An inquest — the term for a legal investigation in the U.K. — into Paloma's death is scheduled for next month.
Responding to an X user who claimed the BBC fabricated their claims about Paloma's death, Kate wrote, 'Let them all fall on their swords. My silence has been for a reason our silence as her parents has been for a reason. The documents do not lie and when we ready we will show the world because it affects everyone what is being done.'
Read the original article on People
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
I buy my children vapes to try to control their addiction
Emma is doing something she swore she would never do. In an attempt to have some control over her children's vaping habits, she's resorted to buying them the vapes herself. She's not proud of it, but says it feels like the only way to keep her two teenagers safe and reduce the high levels of nicotine they were consuming. "It went against every bone in my body to do that, but they're addicted," Emma says. "It's not a simple case of telling them to stop – it is so much harder than that." Emma believes her son, who she has asked the BBC not to name, began vaping in primary school. He managed to keep it from her for a while, but by the time he got to high school, his protests of "that vape's not mine" had started to wear thin. By the time Emma's son was 15, he was becoming breathless, contracted tonsillitis, and, at one point, was in so much pain, Emma called an ambulance. "The paramedics said the incessant vaping could be causing this," she says. "They told him to try and stop, or at the very least cut down." It was then Emma decided something had to change – she was going to take control and buy the vapes - trying to reduce their nicotine intake from 20mg to 10mg. "I warned them – if I see them with a device that has more nicotine in – then I'll stop buying them any, full stop." Emma says she felt she could then be confident the vapes would be from a reputable supplier, they wouldn't be illegal and contain other harmful products, and she could control the level of nicotine. Stop telling me to lower my cortisol - it's making me stressed! People say cola and fries are helping their migraines - but there's a twist 'WeightWatchers set me up to fail' - Why diet industry is losing to jabs like Ozempic Not only is it illegal to sell vapes to anyone under the age of 18, it is also illegal to buy them for anyone underage. Emma knows what she is doing isn't legal, but feels this was her only choice. She believes she has managed to reduce her son's nicotine intake, in part by buying the vapes, but also by having such an open conversation with him. But Emma says the disposable vape ban, which came into effect on 1 June, has had little impact on her children's nicotine consumption. It was introduced due to environmental concerns and to reduce the rising number of children and young people vaping. While vapes provide a far healthier alternative to cigarettes, there are concerns that vaping provides a gateway into nicotine addiction - with disposable vapes enticing children and young people with their fruity flavours and cheap prices. Health experts agree anyone who does not smoke should not start vaping, as it may cause long-term damage to the lungs, heart and brain. But weeks after the ban came into force, Kate Pike from the Chartered Trading Standards Institute, says she fears it won't make any difference - and she says some rechargeable vapes, which are still legal to buy, are being marketed directly at children. "We are finding compliant products – vapes that are refillable and rechargeable – with packs of stickers in them," she says. "What adult is going to want to decorate their vape with stickers?" She also says it is very difficult to tell the difference between the now-illegal disposables and the legal refillable vapes. And due to some being fitted with pre-filled pods, they are still being used "like disposable vapes and discarded." At Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool, home to the UK's first NHS vaping clinic for children, Professor Rachel Isba says parents should not be hard on themselves – they are fighting a battle against the might of a huge vaping industry. "The important thing is not to judge your child; the world our young people live in is a difficult place to grow up in," she says. "There are so many competing pressures." Her clinic supports 11-15-year-olds who have been referred by other NHS healthcare professionals. It has been open since January and already has a six-week waiting list. "The children that come to see me have to want to see me and understand why they are here," Prof Isba says. "It could be that they are noticing a change with their bodies – they struggle to play sport without being out of breath for instance, or they're coughing up blood, or they just know they're addicted and they want to stop or cut down." She says some young people are sleeping with vapes under their pillows so they can get a nicotine hit in the middle of the night, and their addiction can be so strong they experience "micro withdrawals" in school. "They are consuming nicotine so frequently that they begin to feel anxious if they don't have it – even for the length of a double maths lesson, for example." They then think they need the vape to reduce the anxiety, she explains, but it is nicotine withdrawal that is causing those feelings in the first place. Prof Isba offers nicotine replacement therapy – such as gums and patches – and talks to them about how vaping affects their lives. "We might discuss ways they might be able to cut down, what triggers them to vape and even how much money they might save simply by not vaping." She says the government's Tobacco and Vapes bill is a good step forward but would like to see more paediatric addiction services across the NHS. The problem is "far greater" than her clinic, she says, and she is concerned vaping could become a gateway drug into smoking and other dependences. Dan from Twickenham, a father of three boys, agrees. He says the conversation about youth vaping is redundant because, he says, that "horse has bolted". His 17-year-old got expelled from school in February because he was caught with cannabis in his vape, and his 14-year-old was close to losing his school place recently because of a similar issue. "Vaping is a gateway drug," Dan says. "They become addicted to nicotine and then harder stuff follows. "They've definitely smoked [cigarettes] and now my eldest is addicted to nicotine pouches. It's never ending." A government spokesperson told the BBC it was taking "tough action" to tackle youth vaping - including giving Trading Standards the power to issue £200 on-the-spot fines to anyone found selling tobacco or vapes to people underage. They also added that single-use vapes were a "blight on our streets" and that the government had made it compulsory for all vape retailers to provide recycling bins.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
I buy my children vapes to try to control their addiction
Emma is doing something she swore she would never do. In an attempt to have some control over her children's vaping habits, she's resorted to buying them the vapes herself. She's not proud of it, but says it feels like the only way to keep her two teenagers safe and reduce the high levels of nicotine they were consuming. "It went against every bone in my body to do that, but they're addicted," Emma says. "It's not a simple case of telling them to stop – it is so much harder than that." Emma believes her son, who she has asked the BBC not to name, began vaping in primary school. He managed to keep it from her for a while, but by the time he got to high school, his protests of "that vape's not mine" had started to wear thin. By the time Emma's son was 15, he was becoming breathless, contracted tonsillitis, and, at one point, was in so much pain, Emma called an ambulance. "The paramedics said the incessant vaping could be causing this," she says. "They told him to try and stop, or at the very least cut down." It was then Emma decided something had to change – she was going to take control and buy the vapes - trying to reduce their nicotine intake from 20mg to 10mg. "I warned them – if I see them with a device that has more nicotine in – then I'll stop buying them any, full stop." Emma says she felt she could then be confident the vapes would be from a reputable supplier, they wouldn't be illegal and contain other harmful products, and she could control the level of nicotine. Stop telling me to lower my cortisol - it's making me stressed! People say cola and fries are helping their migraines - but there's a twist 'WeightWatchers set me up to fail' - Why diet industry is losing to jabs like Ozempic Not only is it illegal to sell vapes to anyone under the age of 18, it is also illegal to buy them for anyone underage. Emma knows what she is doing isn't legal, but feels this was her only choice. She believes she has managed to reduce her son's nicotine intake, in part by buying the vapes, but also by having such an open conversation with him. But Emma says the disposable vape ban, which came into effect on 1 June, has had little impact on her children's nicotine consumption. It was introduced due to environmental concerns and to reduce the rising number of children and young people vaping. While vapes provide a far healthier alternative to cigarettes, there are concerns that vaping provides a gateway into nicotine addiction - with disposable vapes enticing children and young people with their fruity flavours and cheap prices. Health experts agree anyone who does not smoke should not start vaping, as it may cause long-term damage to the lungs, heart and brain. But weeks after the ban came into force, Kate Pike from the Chartered Trading Standards Institute, says she fears it won't make any difference - and she says some rechargeable vapes, which are still legal to buy, are being marketed directly at children. "We are finding compliant products – vapes that are refillable and rechargeable – with packs of stickers in them," she says. "What adult is going to want to decorate their vape with stickers?" She also says it is very difficult to tell the difference between the now-illegal disposables and the legal refillable vapes. And due to some being fitted with pre-filled pods, they are still being used "like disposable vapes and discarded." At Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool, home to the UK's first NHS vaping clinic for children, Professor Rachel Isba says parents should not be hard on themselves – they are fighting a battle against the might of a huge vaping industry. "The important thing is not to judge your child; the world our young people live in is a difficult place to grow up in," she says. "There are so many competing pressures." Her clinic supports 11-15-year-olds who have been referred by other NHS healthcare professionals. It has been open since January and already has a six-week waiting list. "The children that come to see me have to want to see me and understand why they are here," Prof Isba says. "It could be that they are noticing a change with their bodies – they struggle to play sport without being out of breath for instance, or they're coughing up blood, or they just know they're addicted and they want to stop or cut down." She says some young people are sleeping with vapes under their pillows so they can get a nicotine hit in the middle of the night, and their addiction can be so strong they experience "micro withdrawals" in school. "They are consuming nicotine so frequently that they begin to feel anxious if they don't have it – even for the length of a double maths lesson, for example." They then think they need the vape to reduce the anxiety, she explains, but it is nicotine withdrawal that is causing those feelings in the first place. Prof Isba offers nicotine replacement therapy – such as gums and patches – and talks to them about how vaping affects their lives. "We might discuss ways they might be able to cut down, what triggers them to vape and even how much money they might save simply by not vaping." She says the government's Tobacco and Vapes bill is a good step forward but would like to see more paediatric addiction services across the NHS. The problem is "far greater" than her clinic, she says, and she is concerned vaping could become a gateway drug into smoking and other dependences. Dan from Twickenham, a father of three boys, agrees. He says the conversation about youth vaping is redundant because, he says, that "horse has bolted". His 17-year-old got expelled from school in February because he was caught with cannabis in his vape, and his 14-year-old was close to losing his school place recently because of a similar issue. "Vaping is a gateway drug," Dan says. "They become addicted to nicotine and then harder stuff follows. "They've definitely smoked [cigarettes] and now my eldest is addicted to nicotine pouches. It's never ending." A government spokesperson told the BBC it was taking "tough action" to tackle youth vaping - including giving Trading Standards the power to issue £200 on-the-spot fines to anyone found selling tobacco or vapes to people underage. They also added that single-use vapes were a "blight on our streets" and that the government had made it compulsory for all vape retailers to provide recycling bins.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
Some early-onset cancers are on the rise. Why?
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Some early-onset cancers — those that occur in people under age 50 — are on the rise in the United States. This overall increase is due to a rise in 14 different types of cancers in younger people, according to a new analysis. The largest increases have occurred in breast, colorectal, kidney and uterine cancer diagnoses. While the overall incidence of early-onset cancer is still low, these small increases could add up over time. A rise of a few percent per year is "not a huge change in the number of diagnoses, because cancer is still rare at these ages," Miranda Fidler-Benaoudia, a cancer epidemiologist at Alberta Health Services and the University of Calgary, told Live Science. "But it's when it's happening over two, three decades that it really leads to a meaningful increase in that period." The reasons behind these increases are complex and manifold, and many are probably specific to each type of cancer, experts say. To tease out trends in early-onset cancer diagnoses and the myriad reasons behind them, National Cancer Institute epidemiologist Meredith Shiels and colleagues compiled data on cancers diagnosed in 15- to 49-year-olds between 2010 and 2019 in the U.S. In a study published May 8 in the journal Cancer Discovery, the team broke down changes in the rates of different cancers in three age groups: 15 to 29, 30 to 39, and 40 to 49. Breast and uterine cancer rates increased in every early-onset age group, while rates of colorectal and certain kidney cancers increased among 30- to 39-year-olds and 40- to 49-year-olds, the team found. More than 80% of the additional cancers that occurred in 2019 compared with 2010 were one of these four types. Other diagnoses that increased in at least one early-onset cohort included melanoma, cervical cancer and stomach cancer, though incidences of these cancers remained low overall. Many factors could contribute to these observed increases. Research suggests that obesity is a risk factor for colorectal, kidney and uterine cancers, all of which are rising in younger people. Globally, the percentage of adults who are overweight or obese has increased significantly since 1990. Although most studies linking cancer and obesity were conducted in older adults, it's possible that higher rates of obesity in younger people could also increase the rates of early-onset cancer, the researchers wrote. One 2024 study suggests that more than half of uterine cancers diagnosed in 2019 might be linked to obesity. Changes in reproductive patterns over the years could also be contributing to the increased incidence of early-onset breast cancers, Fidler-Benaoudia said. Girls are getting their periods earlier, and women are having fewer children, and having them later in life, than they did a few generations ago. Being younger at first menstruation, giving birth fewer times, and giving birth for the first time later in life have all been linked to a higher risk of developing certain types of early-onset breast cancer, the researchers wrote. Other research suggests that using oral contraceptives (birth control pills) might also slightly elevate the risk of early-onset breast cancer, though it may also protect against ovarian and endometrial cancers. Earlier detection of cancers in people with genetic risk factors may also play a role. For instance, those with certain BRCA gene variants have a higher risk of breast, ovarian or prostate cancer, while those with Lynch syndrome face an increased risk of myriad cancers, including colon cancer, stomach cancer and brain cancer. I think that we need large studies that follow individuals over the life course, including at younger ages, to be able to identify risk factors for early-onset cancers. Meredith Shiels Newer screening guidelines recommend people with these genes start screening for cancer earlier than those with an average risk of the disease. Even a small increase in the number of early-onset cancers detected via these new recommendations could trigger an uptick in diagnoses. Screening for other, unrelated issues could also help identify certain cancers earlier. For example, changes in imaging procedures for MRIs and CT scans mean that health care professionals are catching more instances of renal cell carcinoma, a type of kidney cancer, during other tests. This incidental detection has led to an increase in kidney cancer diagnoses in almost all age groups, the researchers wrote. People's prenatal or early-life exposures to certain compounds may also fuel specific early-onset cancers. Researchers reported in April in the journal Nature that childhood exposure to a chemical called colibactin, which is produced by certain E. coli strains in the colon, causes DNA mutations observed more frequently in early-onset colorectal cancers. Showing that an exposure directly causes a certain type of early-onset cancer — or even pinpointing which types of exposures might pose a risk — is no easy feat. "I think that we need large studies that follow individuals over the life course, including at younger ages, to be able to identify risk factors for early-onset cancers," Shiels told Live Science in an email. RELATED STORIES —Gut bacteria linked to colorectal cancer in young people —BRCA only explains a fraction of breast cancers — genes tied to metabolism may also up risk —Black patients may need breast cancer screenings earlier than what many guidelines recommend Even with these sorts of extended studies, though, it can be challenging to pin down the exact causes of early-onset cancer. "The issue with cancer at young ages is, whilst it's increasing, it's still relatively rare [compared] to those older age groups," Fidler-Benaoudia said. "To have enough people develop cancer to then identify risk factors in this prospective way is incredibly challenging, because you need huge, huge numbers." While it's impossible to eliminate your individual risk of getting cancer, there are some things that reduce the overall risk at the population level. For instance, wearing sun protection and getting vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV) can help protect against certain cancers, Fidler-Benaoudia said. Similarly, limiting alcohol and smoking can reduce the odds of a person developing cancer at any point in their life, not just before age 50, Tomotaka Ugai, a cancer epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital, told Live Science.