East Yorkshire woman diagnosed with cancer twice to walk a marathon a week for new charity campaign content
Allyson Kent, 60, is taking part in Yorkshire Cancer Research’s ‘We Walk for Yorkshire’ challenge after being treated for cancer twice.
Her marathon challenge will contribute to a collective total of 31,000 miles throughout May, representing the number of people diagnosed with cancer in Yorkshire each year.
The campaign aims to encourage people to get outdoors and enjoy being active, while also raising awareness of the important role exercise plays in cancer prevention and treatment.
Allyson said: “I think being able to ‘Walk for Yorkshire’ is a fantastic thing, and as a proud Yorkshire woman I want to be involved and raise awareness of how the charity’s work is making a difference to people in the region.
“I want to walk the equivalent of a marathon every week, which works out at four miles a day. I live in a close-knit village, and there’s lots of people with dogs, so I’m hoping I can get a team of people walking for Yorkshire together.”
Allyson was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2019, after it was detected during a screening appointment. The cancer was found early, and she had a surgery to remove the lump and radiotherapy to treat the cancer.
Quote from Allyson
A year after being treated for breast cancer, Allyson began to notice pain and bloating in her stomach. She spoke to her GP about the symptoms and was referred for a scan which showed that she had ovarian cancer.
Allyson said: “I was in shock when they told me that it was ovarian cancer. Because I’d had breast cancer, they did tests to see if the ovarian was as a result of this, but the tests showed that it was another primary cancer.
“I had the fluid that had built up in my stomach drained, and then started on three rounds of chemotherapy, before my planned surgery, which I found really hard. I realised that during treatment I felt better in the morning, so I’d go out for my walk then before resting in the afternoon.”
Exercise after a cancer diagnosis can help reduce side effects from treatment, speed up recovery, and reduce the likelihood of the cancer coming back by up to 66%.
Quote from Dr Kathryn Scott
Yorkshire Cancer Research funds world leading research and services in exercise and cancer. The charity runs the Active Together programme, a service which offers people with cancer in Yorkshire personalised exercise, nutrition, and wellbeing support.
People can sign up to take part in We Walk for Yorkshire, choose their own challenge and set up a fundraising page to share with friends and family.