Biography
Lorraine Johnston is the wife of an eight-year lymphoma survivor and the
daughter of a twenty-year lymphoma survivor. In the years since her husband's
diagnosis, she's been involved in a number of support groups that offer
emotional and practical support to lymphoma survivors. Her first book is
Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas: Making Sense of Diagnosis, Treatment &
Options.
In the course of her support group efforts, Lorraine has been interviewed
by the Philadelphia Inquirer and by National Public Radio's Marketplace
program regarding the best ways to find reliable medical information using
a personal computer and various media such as the World Wide Web. She
attempts to dispel the myths that access to sound medical information
is cloaked in secrecy and that medical literature is impossible to
interpret. Using her life-long love of biology and her degree in life
sciences, she helps cancer survivors evaluate accurately the material
they locate, emphasizing resources such as the National Cancer Institute's
databases of treatments and clinical trials, and the National Library of
Medicine's MEDLINE, a collection of over nine million published medical
research studies.
Lorraine's years of study have included many courses in psychology, but she
found that nothing in her educational background prepared her adequately for
facing the terror and heartbreak of cancer. One of her chief interests is
helping the newly diagnosed as well as long-term survivors feel less lonely
and less afraid as they confront their diagnoses and weigh their options.