A mother with an aggressive form of breast cancer has claimed medics failed to diagnose her three times - and even suggested 'there was nothing to worry about'.
Lori Delaney, then 33, from Glasgow, was told by doctors last year that she was too young to suffer from the condition but persevered until her health fears were taken seriously - which she says saved her life, according to The Mirror.
After discovering a lump on her lip and breast and feeling exhausted, the mother-of-two visited her GP as well as a Breast Cancer Awareness truck, only to be told three times that there was 'nothing to worry about' and that she 'didn't fit the profile'.
But after much persistence, doctors eventually referred Lori to Gartnavel General Hospital, where was diagnosed with an aggressive grade three form of breast cancer in October 2019, before undergoing six rounds of chemotherapy.
Lori's treatment was initially cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic but she has since finished radiotherapy and was declared cancer free in May - but has been placed on medication for the next ten years.
Lori Delaney (pictured), then 33, from Glasgow, was told by medics that she was too young to suffer from breast cancer but persevered until her health fears were taken seriously
After discovering a lump on her lip and breast and feeling exhausted, the mother-of-two (pictured with her daughter) visited her GP as well as a Breast Cancer Awareness truck, only to be told three times that there was 'nothing to worry about' and that she 'didn't fit the profile'
But after much persistence, doctors eventually referred Lori (above) to Gartnavel General Hospital, where was diagnosed with an aggressive grade three form of breast cancer in October 2019, before undergoing six rounds of chemotherapy
Sharing her story to raise awareness, Lori wrote on Facebook earlier this week: 'I love the NHS but it is made up of people doing their best - human error can happen.
'Trust your gut instincts, they will tell you the truth. I was told by three people not to worry, but somewhere deep inside me I knew. Trust yourself before you trust anyone else.'
After feeling off, Lori, who lives with husband Scott and children Harry, six, and Ella, five, visited her GP, who said her iron was low. The week before she’d gone to a Breast Cancer Awareness truck at her local Tesco.
Lori's (pictured) treatment was initially cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic but she has since finished radiotherapy and was declared cancer free in May - but has been placed on medication for the next ten years
Sharing her story to raise awareness, Lori (pictured) wrote on Facebook earlier this week: 'I love the NHS but it is made up of people doing their best - human error can happen'
Theatre maker Lori was concerned about her ill feelings since her aunt had been diagnosed with breast cancer two months before. But Lori claims the staff wouldn’t attend to her because she wasn’t under 50.
She later found a tiny lump in her breast and went to her doctor, but says: ‘She said it was nothing to worry about, it was just a lump young women get to do with hormones, and she said I didn’t fit the profile.’
But thanks to Lori’s perseverance, she was eventually sent to her local hospital ‘as a precaution and to put my mind at rest’.
After feeling off, Lori (pictured), who lives with husband Scott and children Harry, six, and Ella, five, visited her GP, who said her iron was low. The week before she’d gone to a Breast Cancer Awareness truck at her local Tesco
Shockingly, Lori said she was told by a medic that she had 'never been so sure in her life' that it was probably a benign lump.
The mother, who was working on a masters degree in performance practice at the University of Glasgow, recalled: ‘They did a biopsy but said that was routine and they didn't do a mammogram because they weren’t worried, and I was so young.’
But two weeks later, Lori was told she had the most aggressive type of breast cancer, at grade three.
She underwent six rounds of ‘brutal’ chemotherapy before undergoing radiotherapy treatment until May, when she was declared cancer free. Lori will, however, continue to be on medication for the next ten years.
MailOnline has contacted Gartnavel General Hospital for comment.