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Emily Bennett Taylor is living proof that even healthy nonsmokers aren’t immune to lung cancer. As she was preparing to celebrate her second wedding anniversary in 2012, Taylor was diagnosed
with stage IV lung cancer. Only 28 at the time of her diagnosis, she was the picture of health. “My doctor initially thought I had asthma or allergies,” Taylor says. “Yet none of the
treatments I was offered seemed to help.” Taylor had heard about Jill’s Legacy, the namesake of Bonnie Addario’s sister foundation, which was named after Jill Costello, a student athlete at
the University of California, Berkeley who died of lung cancer at age 22. Taylor realized she had some of the same symptoms that Costello had and that prompted her to request a chest X-ray.
After receiving the results, her doctor requested a CT scan and then a biopsy. An oncologist ultimately diagnosed her with stage IV adenocarcinoma, a type of lung cancer that often affects
nonsmokers . Although Taylor’s prognosis was grim — the five-year survival rate for her advanced stage of cancer is around 1 percent — she was determined to beat the odds. After undergoing
chemotherapy, radiation and surgery to remove her entire right lung, Taylor is now cancer-free and working as a patient advocate and spokesperson for ALCF. In particular, Taylor participates
in the nonprofit’s popular Lung Cancer Living Room speaker series. Each month in a relaxed home-like setting at ALCF headquarters, specialists and researchers give presentations to lung
cancer patients that cover topics ranging from treatment options to clinical trials. Patients, who either attend in person or stream the presentations live on their computers, share personal
stories while receiving and providing support to others. David Gandara, professor of medicine at the University of California, Davis, said no other organization offers anything like the
ALCF Living Room. “It’s amazing to have patients from all over the world brought together to hear the latest news on lung cancer research and treatments and to become more informed, not only
through the presentations but also through the questions asked afterward,” says Gandara, who has led several Living Room presentations.