A 24-year-old mother has died from cervical cancer after being denied a smear test because she was too young.
Rachel Sarjantson, 24, who was due to marry in March, battled the
disease for a year before her death which her family has described as
'completely avoidable'.
Daily Mail
The legal age for a smear test in the UK is 25 and her grieving family
have now called for the age limit to be lowered to prevent further
deaths.
Her mother, Lisa Rich, said: 'She didn't need to suffer this. It was
tragic and completely unavoidable. It shouldn't be happening in this
country'.
When Miss Sarjantson was finally given a smear test, it was too late as
she had already been diagnosed with aggressive cancer that had taken
over her body.
After a hysterotomy last summer and four weeks of radiotherapy, doctors thought she was in the clear.
But in April, she was told the cancer had returned and by that point her body was too weak to undergo chemotherapy treatment.
She was transferred to hospital on June 30 and remained there until her death on August 12.
The mother-of-one, an early years practitioner, was so devoted to her
20-month-old son Ronnie she even timed her radiotherapy treatment on the
morning of his first birthday so he could still have a party in the
evening.
Her mother, Lisa, said: 'She was a loving person and very close with her
little boy. Throughout the whole thing, she remained positive.
'She never gave in and made a bucket list because as far as she was concerned she was going to beat it.'
She added: 'She was trying to plan camping trips. She really wanted to
get better and to carry on - as far as she was concerned that's what she
was going to do.
'Even when the doctors said you don't have to have any more operations
if you don't want, she said "no, that would be giving in'".
Mr Hyde, a corporal in the army, has now transferred to the second
battalion, Duke of Lancaster's regiment, based at Weeton, so he can be
at home to look after their son.
Her family are now campaigning to lower the age limit for cervical
screening and said a simple procedure could have prevented the tumour
developing.
Her sister, Zoe, 28, who worked with Rachel, said: 'If the age limit had been lowered already, she might still be here.
'So many young girls are dying of it. Maybe in time they can help other mums, for their children's sake if not anything else.'
Cervical cancer often has no symptoms in its early stages but the most
common is irregular bleeding, in between periods, after sex or after the
menopause.
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