Cork woman 'hugely grateful' to have survived pancreatic cancer as she prepares to graduate from UCC
Pancreatic cancer survivor Pamela Deasy was three years into her cancer journey when she started a BA at University College Cork. Pictures: Chani Anderson
Pamela Deasy will likely be one of the happiest students graduating in Cork on Monday when the pancreatic cancer survivor collects her degree.
However, as one of just 14% of patients with that cancer who live longer than five years after treatment, the 53-year-old is calling for more supports for survivors.
âWe definitely need to talk more about these issues we are having as survivors,â she said. âWe need to talk more about it and not hide away or stigmatise people.âÂ
She is âso hugely gratefulâ for having survived, but still faces struggles with extreme tiredness and other changes.
âI look fine but I think definitely we need to take into account peopleâs hidden disabilities,â she said.
Ms Deasy, from Union Hall, was three years into her cancer journey when she started a BA at University College Cork.
âWhen I started, I nearly dropped out that November, I just couldnât cope with the commute, with the pressures,â she said.
The collegeâs disability adviser and ARC House helped her see how different life could be.
âI had fierce survivor guilt, which I didnât even know was a thing then, no one really talks about it,â she said.
âI was thinking âwhy am I still hereâ â it was so hard for me to deal with.âÂ

She took the HSEâs Cancer Thriving and Surviving programme at ARC House, and would like to see information on this shared more widely.
Her son became her carer during the first two years of treatment, and she would also like to see more supports for family members.
In February, she co-founded Pancreatic Cancer Ireland and is a member of other patient groups, including Ucan Ireland.
âIâm so fortunate, and just to highlight that when I got the diagnosis I never in my life expected to be at UCC at this age of life,â she said.
She urged patients to recognise pancreatic cancer is not the death sentence it once was. About 600 people are diagnosed with it annually in Ireland.
âI did say when I got my diagnosis âit was game-overâ because I knew nobody who had survived pancreatic cancer,â she said. âWhereas now Iâm all about trying to instil hope in others.âÂ
Her treatment, which included Whipple surgery, was shared across Cork University Hospital, the Mercy Hospital and the Bon Secours.
âItâs not successful for everybody but it is the only curative treatment,â she said. âI was so lucky.âÂ
Pancreatic Cancer Ireland co-founder Niall Rochford is walking from Cork to Cong (in Mayo) this week to fundraise for the organisation.



