jane fonda
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Jane Fonda announced that her cancer is now in remission. The Grace and Frankie actress shared the news on Instagram on Thursday. In September, Fonda revealed she was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

“Last week I was told by my oncologist that my cancer is in remission and I can discontinue chemo,” Fonda wrote on Instagram alongside a photo of her at a climate rally in Washington, D.C. “I am feeling so blessed, so fortunate,” the 84-year-old actress continued. “I thank all of you who prayed and sent good thoughts my way. I am confident that it played a role in the good news.”

Fonda then revealed that some of her treatments had been “rough” but that she recovered in time to go to D.C. to do “some lobbying” and speak at the Democracy Alliance about climate change.

“I’m especially happy because while my first 4 chemo treatments were rather easy for me, only a few days of being tired, the last chemo session was rough and lasted 2 weeks, making it hard to accomplish much of anything,” Fonda shared.

“The effects wore off just as I went to D.C. for the first live, in-person Fire Drill Fridays rally,” she said. Fire Drill Fridays are a demonstration to raise awareness about climate change that she leads weekly.

 

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The Academy Award winner revealed her diagnosis on Instagram in September. “So, my dear friends, I have something personal I want to share. I’ve been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and have started chemo treatments,” Fonda began in the post. “This is a very treatable cancer. Eighty percent of people survive, so I feel very lucky.”

Fonda acknowledged that she is “privileged” in being able to afford quality healthcare when many others can’t while using her diagnosis as a call to action during “the most consequential time in human history.”

“I will not allow cancer to keep me from doing all I can,” she wrote. “Using every tool in my toolbox, and that very much includes continuing to build this Fire Drill Fridays community and finding new ways to use our collective strength to make a change.”

Fonda herself took to her blog to share that she has “been deeply moved and uplifted by all the expressions of love and support” since she made her diagnosis public, noting that it was about three weeks after she started her first round of chemotherapy. “I want to say again that this is a very treatable cancer, and much progress has been made with the medicines patients are given,” Fonda wrote at the time.

Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, the seventh most common cancer affecting adults in the U.S. according to the LRF, begins in your lymphatic system, which is part of your body’s immune system. Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, or NHL, is not a single type of cancer but a group of closely related cancers impacting the body and responding to treatments differently. The white blood cells grow abnormally and can form tumors throughout the body. More than 80,000 people in the United States will be diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma this year, according to the Lymphoma Research Foundation.

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