vimarsana.com

Card image cap


Deaths of 3 Syracuse firefighters spark mass cancer screening in city fire department
Updated 9:24 AM;
Today 9:00 AM
Syracuse firefighters put out a blaze on the corner of Fitch and Geddes streets in Syracuse on Feb. 19. Dennis Nett | dnett@syracuse.com
Facebook Share
Syracuse, N.Y. – Firefighters didn’t worry about getting cancer when Tim Downes joined the Syracuse Fire Department in 1985.
He’d wear a helmet and other gear caked in soot, carbon and other toxic residue from fires and think nothing of it. “You were supposed to be salty,” he says.
But in 2008 Downes was diagnosed with stage 4 lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system, part of the body’s germ fighting network. He suspects all the toxic chemicals he was exposed to in the line of duty may have caused his cancer. Downes went through 2 ½ years of treatment and is cancer-free today.

Related Keywords

, Alex Cimino , Mike Valenti , Thomas Erwin , Steven Duffy , Tim Downes , Centers For Disease , Firefighter Cancer Foundation , Syracuse Fire Department , Oncology Associates , Hematology Oncology Associates , Disease Control , Garry Grethel , Crouse Hospital , அலெக்ஸ் சிமினோ , மைக் வாலண்டி , தாமஸ் அர்‌விந் , ஸ்டீவன் டஃபி , நேரம் டௌந்ஸ் , மையங்கள் க்கு நோய் , சிராகஸ் தீ துறை , புற்றுநோயியல் கூட்டாளிகள் , ஹீமாட்டாலஜி புற்றுநோயியல் கூட்டாளிகள் , நோய் கட்டுப்பாடு , குரூஸ் மருத்துவமனை ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.