I work in haematology/oncology (ie: blood cancers). We also had a husband diagnosed with multiple myeloma a year ago, then just a few weeks back, before Christmas, the wife gets lymphoma.
This is "couple's therapy" you never want to have.
Blood cancers used to be relatively rare, making up a tiny 3% of all cancer types. So what are the odds a husband AND the wife would both get it.
I work in haematology/oncology (ie: blood cancers). We also had a husband diagnosed with multiple myeloma a year ago, then just a few weeks back, before Christmas, the wife gets lymphoma.
This is "couple's therapy" you never want to have.
Blood cancers used to be relatively rare, making up a tiny 3% of all cancer types. So what are the odds a husband AND the wife would both get it.
I work in haematology/oncology (ie: blood cancers). We also had a husband diagnosed with multiple myeloma a year ago, then just a few weeks back, before Christmas, the wife gets lymphoma.
This is "couple's therapy" you never want to have.
Blood cancers used to be relatively rare, making up a tiny 3% of all cancer types. So what are the odds a husband AND the wife would both get it.
Lymphoma does seem to be one of the more common ones I see, as well as thyroid cancer.