『Bad Blood: The Diary of a Cancer』のカバーアート

Bad Blood: The Diary of a Cancer

Bad Blood: The Diary of a Cancer

著者: Jamie East
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At some point 1 in 2 people will be affected by cancer.


I was the same as you whenever I read that stat, I just always felt sorry for the other guy. Plot twist… you will occasionally be the other guy.


In June 2025, after a completely random visit to the doctor, I was diagnosed with Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia, which despite its fun sounding name, isn’t exactly a barrel of laughs. Sh** got real quite quickly.


Up until then, I was a healthy, active, happy and successful man, heading into middle-age with carefree abandon. Life has a funny way of humbling you.


As someone who’s lived their life in front of a camera, microphone or audience, my knee-jerk reaction was (no, not to monetise it) switch on the recorder and talk myself through it - making sense of my diagnosis (what even is Leukaemia?) the impending chemotherapy, my family and how our lives had been flipped on it’s head.


Look, there are tons of these podcasts out there, by some incredible people with stories far more horrific than mine (spoiler alert - I’m typing myself this a year later) - but if a perplexed, foul-mouthed audio diary from someone who once interviewed Jedward in a carpark is your thing, you’re in the right place.


Jamie

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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社会科学 衛生・健康的な生活
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  • 4. The Future
    2026/07/10

    In this episode, Jamie marks the one-year anniversary of his Leukaemia diagnosis and uses that milestone to talk about something that’s been making him furious: the rise of unqualified health “experts”, and a particularly dangerous example from Stephen Bartlett’s Diary of a CEO.


    Jamie revisits a viral clip he recorded from his hospital bed in July 2025, calling out a Bartlett trailer that appeared to suggest a boy with blood cancer and a life‑threatening infection was saved by simply going outside into the sun. Jamie explains why that kind of framing is not just misleading but actively dangerous for people undergoing treatment.


    From there, he widens the lens to look at how big-name podcasters and YouTubers use pseudo-critical thinking, clickbait editing, and PR tactics to distract from the genuinely harmful implications of their content.


    At the same time, Jamie offers a deeply personal update on his own health, mental state, friendships, and what it means to move forward without letting cancer define his entire identity.

    Trigger Warning: This podcast tackles topics that some listeners may find distressing.


    Resources:

    Leukaemia UK - a brilliant charity.

    Stand Up To Cancer

    More information on Chronic Myleoid Leukaemia

    The School of Cancer Sciences

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分
  • 3. The Reset
    2026/07/10

    In this deeply personal episode, Jamie reflects on life in the strange limbo between diagnosis and “getting back to normal.”


    Recorded just before his first tentative trip back into the outside world after treatment, he talks honestly about friendship, identity, guilt, and what it really feels like to be given another shot at life.


    Jamie also shares another powerful clip from his earlier conversation with cancer researchers Professor David Vitrie and Professor Vinrik Helgersun, about the long-term battle to cure cancer, the struggle to fund research, and the fight to attract and keep the brightest young minds in medicine when tech and finance are dangling far bigger pay cheques.


    Along the way, he tackles the uncomfortable realities of male health, the emotional whiplash of early diagnosis, and the impact of social media and misinformation on people’s willingness to trust science.

    Trigger Warning: This podcast tackles topics that some listeners may find distressing.


    Resources:

    Leukaemia UK - a brilliant charity.

    Stand Up To Cancer

    More information on Chronic Myleoid Leukaemia

    The School of Cancer Sciences

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    21 分
  • 2. The Biopsy
    2026/07/03

    In this episode, Jamie heads to the Wolfson Wohl Cancer Research Centre in Glasgow, meeting Professor David Vitrie and Dr. Vigne Helgerson to dig into what chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) actually is – and how long it might have been silently living in his body.


    What starts as a “back‑of‑the‑fag‑packet” explanation of CML turns into something far more personal. Jamie reflects on the moment he realised he’d likely been walking around with leukemia for years, and how that reframed his sense of hope, his future, and what really matters.


    From there, the episode moves into the very raw, practical side of a new cancer diagnosis: waiting for specialists, navigating private vs NHS care, enduring a bone marrow biopsy, and facing the word “chemo” for the first time.

    Trigger Warning: This podcast tackles topics that some listeners may find distressing.


    Resources:

    Leukaemia UK - a brilliant charity.

    Stand Up To Cancer

    More information on Chronic Myleoid Leukaemia

    The School of Cancer Sciences

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    25 分
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