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POSTED: 11: 03 pm CST December 6, 2010
UPDATED: 11: 40 pm CST December 6, 2010
OMAHA, Neb.-Fight against cancer has transformed personal for four people, dealing with the disease in your daily work. Been hit four women who work in Alesund Oude's breast health centre of cancer. Jaymi Johnson, 28, is the youngest of the four. It combines CAT scanning technician Terri Fitzpatrick, x-ray technician Karen Murray and Diagnostics Coordinator Tammy Tanner in the group. "It is one of those things I saw only every day and would have never thought it me would happen", said Johnson. Nuclear medicine technologist spends many their days studying cancer to look at the disease through microscopes, where it has spread in their patients. Johnson was diagnosed in May. Since then has had a double mastectomy and then reconstructive surgery. Said their three colleagues a decade apart in age, you can be too easy. "I was happy, luckier than many of the people," Fitzpatrick said. "You caught mean early." You said the disease there either in front of their faces, in the Office or on the back of their minds is. The painful memory stirs up some compassion. "I am more inclined to sit and take that extra 20 minutes, you tell their stories or provide that embrace to hear", Tanner said. Fitzpatrick, are someone, really lazy feels good to scan, you know how that feels, said "I will say, ' I am part of the Club-part the cancer Club'." And immediately get you a smile on your face and want more and questions speak, "Murray said." To four out of 30 women at risk for breast cancer develop according to the National Cancer Institute. Copyright 2010 by KETV.com. All rights reserved. This material may be not published, sent, rewritten or redistributed.
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