Expert care helps local sportscaster get back in the game
More than 15,000 surgeries are performed at PRHC every year. Last spring, Gary Dalliday was one of them. Now, he can't say enough about the people who cared for him, and the incredible impact that donors have on patients' lives.
Everything seemed to be going according to plan. After 33 years in television and radio, sportscaster Gary Dalliday was ready to retire. Although he would miss his friends and colleagues, he was already thinking about the extra time he'd have to spend with his wife, children and grandchildren or with friends on the golf course.
With his last day at work just around the corner, however, Gary received some terrible news. He had cancer.
"I'm sure you can imagine how shocked I was to find out that instead of retiring I'd be fighting cancer,” says Gary. "After all, I'd always taken pretty good care of myself. I thought I was healthy. What I quickly realized is that it doesn't matter how healthy you are. Cancer doesn't care.”
It all started innocently enough. For several months Gary had been experiencing difficulty urinating. In the beginning, he wrote his problem off as a sign of aging and didn't think very much about it.
"Then one night at a hockey game in Sarnia things took a turn for the worse,” Gary remembers. "I felt terrible and kept having to use the bathroom. Then later in my hotel room, I found myself looking into a toilet bowl that was full of blood.”
Gary says that everything happened so quickly after that, it's all just a blur now. One minute he was sitting in his surgeon's office being told he had a large tumour on his bladder. The next he was being prepped for life-saving surgery.
"I won't lie, I was nervous,” says Gary. "I wasn't scared so much of dying but of what I'd leave behind – my family, my friends – my life.”
Two years later and the doctors have told Gary that everything looks good. He's officially retired but he hasn't stopped. You can still hear him commentating for the Petes or find him on the golf course with his buddies.
Looking back Gary gives credit to not only the doctors and nurses who treated him, but the PRHC Foundation donors who he believes helped save his life.
"I'm alive to day to tell my story because my surgeon Dr. Meade had the tools he needed in the operating room – tools that donors helped pay for,” says Gary. "That's why I support the Foundation. So the next time someone like me needs help, PRHC's doctors and nurses will have the tools they need to save someone else's life.”
Yes! I want to make a difference in the lives of patients.
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