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Early action was decisive for reporter's cancerous 'freckle'

As Preston recorded its hottest temperatures since the 1960s, thousands were out sunbathing and working on their tans.
But in the sun lies a potentially deadly danger, as 21-year-old Lancashire Evening Post reporter Stef Beaumont found out. She tells her story...



My fists squeezed into little balls as I felt the needle prick my leg. I have always been a softie with needles.

I had noticed a mole on my thigh had started to change. Secretly I kept telling myself that it was my imagination, but something felt wrong every time I looked at it.

Now here I was in hospital having a biopsy.

I didn't feel ill or have any symptoms but I started to suspect something wasn't right after I had read an article about skin cancer.
I thought that one of the photographs looked like the "freckle" on my leg, which I had had since I could remember.

I didn't abuse sunbeds or refuse to use sun lotion. I took sunny holidays like anybody else. Admittedly I had used a sunbed a few months before to give me a base tan before I went away so that I didn't burn to a crisp, because, like most people, I thought that was the safe thing to do.

I saw my GP and a week later I was at the dermatology unit in the local hospital being examined. The plastic surgeon performed a biopsy just two hours later.

I had one long special stitch to hold the scar together as it was on my thigh and the skin can stretch, forming a wider scar. The sample was sent off to the histology department, where they check the skin.

Two weeks later, the surgeon broke the terrifying news that I'd had a malignant melanoma - the deadliest form of skin cancer.

I was just 20, and had just started the final year of my degree. My immediate fear was whether I would need chemotherapy but fortunately the melanoma hadn't advanced that far because it was caught very early.

My second thought was how I was going to tell my family and my partner who was waiting in the corridor.

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