Kim loves caring for her community. She and her husband coached softball at Murphysboro High School for many years. A doting grandmother who prioritizes her family, she stepped down from coaching to care for her husband's family during a time of illness. Kim returned to coaching as the Murphysboro High School freshman volleyball coach after he healed in the summer of 2023.
That September, Kim had her routine screening mammogram at the SIH Breast Center in Carbondale. She consistently had her mammogram each year since she turned 40, which was only six years prior. A few days later, she was asked to return for a diagnostic mammogram, where the team discovered a cancerous spot on her breast.
“There's no breast cancer in my family, so I always tell people I'm a wild card,” Kim says. “I have been getting my mammograms for six years, seven years. Never had anything come up on any of them, so this was a complete shock.”
Kim received a phone call from SIH Breast Center Medical Director and breast surgeon Dr. Catherine O’Connor with her diagnosis of stage 2A breast cancer on September 25, 2023. In addition to being in her breast, the cancer had spread to one lymph node.
Kim was originally diagnosed by a screening mammogram. ’Screening’ is the mammogram you get once a year to see if there's anything to be concerned about. In Kim's case, her tumor was way in the back of her breast. There was no way she could feel it, I couldn't feel it. By the time either one of us would have been able to feel it, it most likely would have been stage three, which has a lower survival rate, more aggressive treatment. With getting it early, Kim had more treatment options.
Kim continued to coach volleyball as long as she was able, making it much of the way through the season. The team put together a “Pink Out Night” in her honor in early October. Even the opposing team, Harrisburg, wore their pink in support. But once Kim began chemotherapy in late October, she had to step back from coaching and watch from the bleachers. Her return to coaching lasted less than one month.
SIH’s advanced cancer team leapt into action. Dr. O’Connor, medical oncologist Dr. Lakshmi Manogna Chintalacheruvu and radiation oncologist Dr. Michael Little tailored a care plan just for Kim. Over the next six months, Kim underwent six rounds of chemotherapy and surgery on March 7, 2024. Kim’s post-surgery pathology report confirmed her lymph nodes were clean, which was the biggest influence on her long-term outcome.