Publication Date: 12 May 2026
ISBN: 9781922923141
Format: Softcover
AUD: $29.99
Dangerously Well
How do you respond when someone you know and love is struck down with a rare life-threatening cancer? That person is still very much alive, and needs expert care, attention and support during years of adjusting, relearning and rehabilitation. This happens to thousands of Australians and their families every year. It is usually hidden and rarely talked about, but it is common, costly and devastating. How do we and the person involved handle it?
Leading surgeon Dr. Chris O’Brien believed that the most aggressive and disabling cancers could be treated in ways that make it possible for people to live longer or at best be cured. His work led to the establishment of the Chris O’Brien Lifehouse in Camperdown NSW in 2013. The Lifehouse changed the way cancer care was delivered, all while Dr O’Brien was facing his own inevitably lethal brain cancer.
Author Roger Rees’ close connection with the Lifehouse began in 2018 when his dear friend Anne Marks was diagnosed with a rare type of salivary gland cancer. Dangerously Well is an elegant testament to Anne’s journey - and those of other patients - from good health to end of life through the remarkable palliative care given by doctors at the Chris O'Brien Lifehouse.
In this book Roger offers valuable insights for patients, medical professionals and families. He explores delayed diagnosis, that which Anne experienced for years, and raises questions at the heart of what should be best medical practice. He also bears witness to medicine at its finest and talks of the remarkable friendships between doctors and patients.
Anne Marks passed away in June 2024. Roger writes Dangerously Well in her memory.
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About the Author
Roger Rees is Emeritus Professor of Disability and Research at Flinders University, where he spent over 25 years involved in the rehabilitation and education of people with brain injury. He has a PhD in Education and Neuroscience from University of New England. He has twelve broadcast scripts for the ABC Radio National's Science Show, and his poems and essays have been published in The Australian, The Advertiser, The Age, Australian Journal of Psychology, Journal of Orthopsychiatry, Neuro Rehabilitation, among many others.
Roger has received ARC and commercial grants and awards for research and investigative writing, and the Flinders University Excellent Achievement Medal for his promotion of equal opportunities. He’s the author of eight published works including a collection of poetry. When he’s not writing, he reads the work of the many Russian poets who line his shelves - Pushkin, Akhmatova, Blok, and Pasternak.