Jaimeson Jones

He spent his high school years in remission, confiding in a friend about the runup to his diagnosis that “It just kept getting bigger and bigger, but I was too embarrassed to tell my mom.” Tragically, after 4½ years, Jaimeson's cancer recurred in his lungs at the end of his freshman year at WSU. After a year and a half of even more-horrific treatment and more surgeries, Jaimeson died in 2010 at age 20.
Jaimeson's admission about his embarrassment haunts us. This young man, with his whole life ahead of him, did not have to die.
There is an inexcusable gap in health education around this topic. Unknown to most, testicular cancer is the #1 solid tumor cancer in people with testicles between ages 15 and 44. Importantly, it is 95-98% curable when caught early. Unfortunately, due to the very nature of young people -- feeling invincible, not wanting to seek medical care and, perhaps most of all, embarrassment -- fully half of those diagnosed with testicular cancer do not seek medical care until AFTER the cancer has spread. Naturally, this worsens the prognosis. The incidence of testicular cancer is growing - in 2019, there are projected to be more than 9,000 cases in the U.S. alone. Tragically, over 400 people die every year of this highly-curable disease, half of them between 20 and 33 -- at the very beginning of the prime of their lives.
Nancy Balin
