At just 27 years old, Clarina Jean-Pierre faced a life-altering diagnosis that no one in her family had experienced before – breast cancer. She noticed a rash on her breast and, determined to take charge of her health, pushed for further tests.
“Ultimately [I was] looked in the face by the primary and told, ‘Look, you’re overexaggerating your health, Clarina,'” Jean-Pierre recalled in a report published by WPBF News earlier this month.
Those additional tests proved critical, as she was diagnosed with stage one breast cancer. Newly engaged with a young daughter, Jean-Pierre opted for a single mastectomy and oral medication, choosing the path that gave her the best chance at life.
“I believe that if I did a lumpectomy, what was I going to have left,” she said. “I might as well let [the doctor] take it.”
Jean-Pierre was on the road to recovery, ready to embrace life once more. However, a post-reconstruction check-up delivered a shocking blow – stage 4, grade B breast cancer had returned.
This time, the disease had also spread to her right lung. Jean-Pierre faced chemotherapy infusions in the very room where she had recently started working at Baptist Health’s Cancer Center in Boca Raton.
“Before I clocked out, I remember specifically going into one of our little private rooms and going to extra clean it with sandy clothes, because that was where I was going to sit when I came in the next morning at 8 a.m.,” she remembered.
Through grueling rounds of chemotherapy, Jean-Pierre’s husband became her unwavering support, staying on the phone with her throughout her recovery at home.
“Some days I would wake up and I would feel like I don’t even have chemo,” she said. “Then the very next day I would wake up and I would feel like I can’t even get my head off the pillow.”
Jean-Pierre and her medical team closely monitored her progress, ensuring that her treatment was effective without unnecessary prolongation.
“When we went in and we did my PET scan after the third chemo, there was no masses, nowhere, not in my breast, not in my lung,” Jean-Pierre said. Clear scans arrived in February 2023.
Though the chemotherapy left its mark, Jean-Pierre emerged as a two-time breast cancer survivor with a profound mission. She is determined to inspire others, creating a community called ‘Surviving for Brown Girls’ to support women on their cancer journey.
But her most important message is clear: never hesitate to seek medical help if you suspect something is wrong with your health. Advocate for yourself, as Jean-Pierre has done, because, as she says, “I’m tired of losing sisters to this disease.” She will continue to fight and advocate for cancer, cherishing the second chance at life she’s been given.