Demetrius Johnson always played by the rules, especially when it came to his health. He ate well, exercised five days a week, and got annual checkups—that is until the Covid-19 pandemic limited access to health care across his hometown of Eleuthera, an island in the Bahamas.
In January 2021, when his community began to reopen, Demetrius went to his doctor and mentioned a painless lump on the right side of his neck. A biopsy later revealed it was a malignant tumor.
“I can’t explain how it feels for anybody else; but when I heard the news, I was just like, huh? Are you serious?” explains Demetrius, who was 42 years old at the time of his diagnosis and is a married father of two children.
His sister, Donnica Major, is the senior operations manager in the Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of Maryland Medical Center. She encouraged Demetrius to travel to Baltimore and meet with Rodney Taylor, MD, chief of otorhinolaryngology-head and neck surgery at UMMC. Demetrius did not hesitate to book a flight.
After a thorough examination and tests, Dr. Taylor and his team confirmed the diagnosis. On March 30, 2021, they performed a challenging 14-hour surgery on Demetrius to remove the rare cancer. Following the surgery, he also completed six weeks of radiation therapy.
“The quality of care that I received from the entire team at the University of Maryland is second to none,” Demetrius says. “I sing their praises every day.”
When Demetrius heard about the Roslyn and Leonard Stoler Center for Advanced Medicine,he could only imagine its impact on future patients and the discoveries that will happen within its walls.
“To the folks who have given and to those who are thinking about giving, I say thank you and I bless you,” Demetrius says. “Thanks to the incredible care I received, I now have the opportunity to be around a little while longer for my children and family. It goes so much deeper than just providing funding. I am a living testament of what philanthropy can do and how it can help.”