Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Aboriginal girl stopped chemo because she felt it would kill her: Mother

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2015 10:53 AM

    HAMILTON — The parents of a young aboriginal girl who died after refusing to continue chemotherapy say their daughter made the difficult decision because she felt the treatment would kill her before cancer would.

    Sonya Sault says chemo took such a horrendous toll on her 11-year-old daughter, Makayla, that she nearly died of septic shock three weeks after beginning the treatment.

    Makayla, who suffered from a rare form of leukemia, died last month after suffering a stroke, and her parents blamed her death on "the harsh side effects" 11 weeks of chemotherapy inflicted on her body.

    Sonya Sault says doctors at McMaster Children's Hospital in Hamilton had given her daughter at most a 72 per cent chance of survival if she received chemotherapy treatment for several years.

    Sault says her daughter continued to receive other forms of treatment from an oncologist at McMaster hospital as well as her own physician near home, until she died at home "in her parents arms."

    Sault made the comments today at an aboriginal health conference organized by McMaster University.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    City Bylaw Can Discriminate In Setting Property Tax Rates: B.C. Judge

    City Bylaw Can Discriminate In Setting Property Tax Rates: B.C. Judge
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge says a Vancouver Island city can discriminate when it sets two separate tax rates for forestry lands within its municipal boundaries.

    City Bylaw Can Discriminate In Setting Property Tax Rates: B.C. Judge

    Dean Del Mastro's lawyer seeks mistrial in election overspending case

    Dean Del Mastro's lawyer seeks mistrial in election overspending case
    PETERBOROUGH, Ont. — Former Conservative MP Dean Del Mastro is seeking to have a mistrial declared in his election overspending case.

    Dean Del Mastro's lawyer seeks mistrial in election overspending case

    Montreal cabbie pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and other charges

    Montreal cabbie pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and other charges
    MONTREAL — A Montreal cab driver accused of running over a man in an incident widely shared on YouTube has pleaded not guilty to several charges.

    Montreal cabbie pleads not guilty to aggravated assault and other charges

    Winter storm shuts down businesses, cancels flights as Maritimers hunker down

    Winter storm shuts down businesses, cancels flights as Maritimers hunker down
    HALIFAX — A blizzard warning cancelled flights and closed schools, government offices and universities throughout the Maritimes on Tuesday as people hunkered down during a powerful winter storm that unleashed stiff winds and dumped heavy snow on the region.

    Winter storm shuts down businesses, cancels flights as Maritimers hunker down

    Bogs into bush: Research suggests climate change threatens Alberta wetlands

    Bogs into bush: Research suggests climate change threatens Alberta wetlands
    EDMONTON — New research suggests that climate change is threatening to turn Alberta's huge northern wetlands into vast expanses of bush and shrub.

    Bogs into bush: Research suggests climate change threatens Alberta wetlands

    Manitoba government promises help to keep more kids in home instead of in care

    Manitoba government promises help to keep more kids in home instead of in care
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba is promising more help for families in danger of losing their kids to government care.

    Manitoba government promises help to keep more kids in home instead of in care