How One Woman Climbed from Patient to Advocate

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Allison Freedman was an avid hiker, mother of young twins, and had just completed an MBA when she began suffering from severe back and rib pain and overwhelming fatigue. Repeated visits to the doctor and medical testing left her without a diagnosis. As her pain worsened, imaging revealed she had multiple broken ribs and vertebrae. At 42, a bone marrow biopsy confirmed that she had the blood cancer multiple myeloma. Freedman underwent intensive treatment including chemotherapy and a stem cell transplant. At one point she became bedridden. Though she went into remission, she had been unable to live the active lifestyle she previously enjoyed and took to physical therapy to build back her strength and regain her abilities. At 50, she managed to climb Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and now mentors others with multiple myeloma. We spoke to Freedman about her journey through diagnosis and treatment, her recovery, and why she went from not wanting to talk about her condition to being a patient advocate.

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