Leroy Sievers was also a National Public Radio commentator and the author of a popular blog describing his battle with cancer. He was diagnosed with the deadly disease in 2001. The disease had spread resulting in a brain tumor and lung cancer. Sievers began writing about this experience in 2001. Since then, he shared his open thoughts about the terrible daily fight with the deadly disease.
“That day” is the day the doctor tells you, ‘You have
cancer.’ Every one of us knows someone who’s had to face that news. It’s scary,
it’s sad. But it’s still life, and it’s a life worth living. ‘My cancer’ is a
daily account of my life and my fight with cancer,” Leroy wrote on his blog.
He
endured a series of painful treatments and procedures, including two brain
surgeries, three lengthy back surgeries, multiple rounds of chemotherapy,
radiation and radiofrequency ablation. After all these painful treatments he
recently decided to give up his fight with cancer, saying “My doctors are
trying to kill me.”
During the invasion of
He
also produced broadcasts on Hurricane Andrew in
Sievers won 12 national Emmys, two George Foster Peabody Awards,
and two Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia University Awards. He volunteered with the
Red Cross and traveled to