Caroline Kennedy's daughter has published an article in The New Yorker describing the aggressive treatment she has received over the past 18 months and accusing her cousin, the health secretary, of the denialism and cutbacks policies she has embraced.
JFK's granddaughter Tatiana Schlossberg announces that she has terminal cancer: "When you die, you remember everything"
Caroline Kennedy's daughter has published an article written in the New Yorker group that describes the treatment of wars she has faced in the last 18 months, according to the informant, that the politics of rejection and fragmentation.
No, November 23, 2025.Updated at7.25."To fight with my blood."This is Titan Shiloiberg, who announces in the union published this Saturday that she has cancer.Nora F. Kennedy, 35, Journalist Nora F. Kennedy, 35, journalist and granddaughter of Lerulin Kennedy, to the hospital to give birth in May 2024.It is a rare genetic myukemia at the institutional level when communication is possible.
"The day before I had swam a kilometer in the pool when I was nine months pregnant. I wasn't sick. I didn't feel sick. In fact, he was one of the healthiest people I know. At the time, I couldn't believe they were talking about me," she says of the diagnosis."I had a son I loved more than anything in the world and a newborn to take care of."
An article published on the New Yorker website on the anniversary of Kennedy's assassination detailed 18 months of treatment and his oncologist's search for life-saving treatment."He looked over every inch of the earth, looking for more treatments for me," she says."He knows I don't want to die and he's trying to avoid it," but after his last treatment, doctors gave him a year to live.
When you first die, at least in my little experience, you start to remember everything.People's guesses, places from you non-stop." These pictures are of his best friend at school also making a mud cake with candles and an American flag, "which we see burning." Also his college boat shoes were worn a few days after breaking the steel storm, because he laughed after the snow storm broke. sliding.
After 50 days of treatment, he was in remission and went home, but suffered a stroke.In January, he became part of a clinical trial with the car treatment with the car treatment, in which the transplanted cells were programmed to attack the cancer.And there is a second movement.During that time, Schlossberg tried to be the perfect patient, "if I do everything you don't need if I don't need help or have any problems," he wrote.
During these few months, his family and those around him provided a lot of support.His parents and siblings "raise my children and accompany me to my various hospital rooms almost every day."The article describes several rounds of aggressive treatment to stop the cancer, beginning with chemotherapy and a bone marrow transplant.His sister, Rose Schlossberg, donated stem cells for the transplant, and his brother, Jack Schlossberg, who is running for Congress, Joe, was a half match, but "she still asked all the doctors if a half match would be better."Her husband, George Moran, a physician, slept on hospital floors and "dealt with doctors and insurance companies I didn't want to talk to."
"I've tried my whole life to be good" as a way to avoid suffering again for his mother, whose father, JFK, died when he was five years old.At 10 he met the assassination of his uncle, Robert F. Kennedy, and in 1999 his brother, John F. Kennedy Juning fell on the beach of Massachusetts."Now I've created a new disaster in his life, in our family life, and there's nothing I can do to stop it," as anger fills them with a love they can't see growing.That's why he reminds his Son often that he is a writer and "not a sick person" and they try to remember together, even though he knows these memories.
Tatiana Schlossberg, science journalist for the New York Times, also blames her cousin and Secretary of State for Health, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., for the decisions and budget cuts he made, which not only put his health, which is so fragile, at risk, but also the well-being of the United States.Schlossberg calls RFK Jr. “an embarrassment to our family” and how the government is cutting millions of dollars in messenger RNA vaccines used to fight certain types of cancer.And budget cuts have halted treatment and clinical trials for thousands of patients.“Suddenly, the healthcare system you trusted is strained and unstable.”
