By Don C.  Reed

For all who suffer chronic (long-lasting or incurable) disease, there is not only the price of pain, but also the financial expense, which can be enormous.

For example, cancer greatly afflicted my family. My mother died at age 52 from breast cancer; my older and younger sisters passed from leukemia, a form of blood cancer, and my wife of 50 years was taken by pancreatic cancer.

Personally, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer. Given a choice of treatments, I opted for basically everything: surgery, radiation, hormone injections. The name of the latter escapes me, but the syringe was like a harpoon.

The costs were staggering–$990,000. Just shy of a million bucks…Fortunately (and to my astonished delight) the insurance (Kaiser) covered it all.

But would I be made well? After the surgery, the doctor told me:

“The prostate is shaped like a Mickey Mouse hat. Your cancer has spread to the edge of  the “ears”, and maybe past that.  If it grows too far and gets into the bloodstream, that could be fatal,” he said,  “So let’s hope we got it all.”

A series of blood tests showed nothing negative; I almost forgot about it.

But then it was time for another cancer check, a colonoscopy, to seek out colon cancer.

There was no pain; I just lay on my side and a miniature camera was inserted. The idea was to take samples and remove potentially cancerous  growths.

I slept through the procedure, woke up, and went home.

In the fullness of time I got a letter in the mail.  I did not hurry to open it.

But when I did, the note said:

“Your biopsies…. show no signs of cancer or infection. No future screening for colon cancer is recommended at this time…”

According to the Center for Disease Prevention  and Control (CDC),  “1.8 million Americans are diagnosed with cancer every year (at a cost of $233 billion)” with more than 600,000 annual fatalities… (1)

Cancer’s cost is expected to be more than $240 billion by the year 2030, and it is only one of the chronic conditions plaguing America.

The total cost of American  healthcare is roughly five trillion dollars. Of that mountain of money, 90% ($4.5 trillion) goes to the treatment of chronic diseases, including cancer. (2)

I was treated, not cured. Like a partial amputation, portions of my body were removed. I had good treatment, and they caught it in time.

What America needs is reliable long-range research funding, a systematic quest for cure.

The golden state’s magnificent stem cell program, (the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, or CIRM) has paid for millions of dollars in cancer research; the National Institutes of Health (NIH) paid for a great deal more. The cancer research portion of the NIH is called the National  Cancer Institute (NCI) and it is the largest funder of cancer research in the world.

How important is that?

“For the past 50 years, every significant medical breakthrough, especially in the treatment of cancer, has been linked to sustained federal investment in research at NIH and NCI. This has contributed to…over 18 million cancer survivors…living in the U.S. today…” (3)

Unfortunately, the Trump Administration has proposed enormous budget cuts, roughly 40% of the entire program.

Read the chilling article, “NIH budget cuts threaten the future of biomedical research…”by Niamh Ordner, Los Angeles Times, July 6, 2025. (4)

It details how the Trump Administration proposes to gut the NIH.

However, a judicial decision restored some of the cuts.  Two thousand three hundred (2,300) research projects were scheduled to be terminated by the Trump Administration; of these, nearly half (nine hundred) were restored, by order of the court. (5)

Back and forth, the struggle continues.  It is long and difficult, but we dare not turn away.

And if we keep plugging stubbornly ahead, simply refusing to surrender,  our time will inevitably come—and  the  rewards may be nothing less than life itself.

1.    https://www.cdc.gov/chronic-disease/data-research/facts-stats/index.html

2.    https://fightcancer.org/releases/future-cancer-cures-jeopardy-president-proposes-massive-cuts-national-cancer-institute

3.    https://www.latimes.com/science/story/2025-07-06/nih-budget-cuts-threaten-the-future-of-medical-research-and-young-scientists

4.    Federal judge orders 500 health science grants at UCLA restored, rebuffing Trump’s suspensions

5.    https://www.insidehighered.com/news/faculty/research/2026/01/02/nih-approves-100s-grant-applications-it-shelved-or-denied

Don C. Reed is the author of four books on the California stem cell program,  including most recently: Science, Politics, Stem Cells and Genes: CALIFORNIA’S WAR ON CHRONIC DISEASE, from World Scientific Publishers Inc., available at a discount from:

https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/12997#t=aboutBook

Visit his website at: https:www.stemcellbattles.net

Reed has also written numerous books and award-winning articles on sharks, dolphins, eels, seals and killer whales, based on 15 years as a professional diver for Marine World Africa  USA. His books are available at Amazon.com.

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