71°F
weather icon Windy

Community rallies around family as girl fights cancer

The community’s support has helped buoy a local family’s hope as it fights its toughest battle yet.

Late last year, 10-year-old Emilee Giamanco was diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer after a mass was discovered in her brain stem.

“The doctors wrote it off as vertigo,” said her dad, Joe Giamanco.

He said she had been having migraines and nausea as well as throwing up everything. Her symptoms did not go away, so her parents took her to another doctor, who said it was an ear infection and prescribed her an antibiotic.

“We were stressing out. … It was getting worse,” he said.

After she finished the antibiotics, the symptoms were still there, so on Nov. 8 Emilee had an MRI, which showed the mass. Joe Giamanco said they rushed her to Sunrise Hospital that same day, and she was then flown to Primary Children’s Hospital in Salt Lake City because the treatment she needed is not available in Las Vegas.

Once there, the doctors determined that she had diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma(DIPG), a tumor in the middle of the brain stem. More tests showed that the cancer had spread to her spine and another part of her brain.

The only treatment for DIPG is radiation, which Emilee started Nov. 25. It ended today, Jan. 9.

Since the diagnosis, Boulder City has rallied around the Giamanco family by encouraging them, holding fundraisers and making them feel at home despite being a state away.

“It just blows me away how many people in Boulder City I don’t know … are helping my family and Emilee,” said Joe Giamanco. “It’s amazing what community really is. … We’re seeing all these people come together as one and help our family. … It’s just hope.”

“From what we hear, it’s been really great,” said her mom, Marissa Giamanco. “We haven’t been back to Boulder City. It’s still been amazing. It’s been really great.”

King and Mitchell elementary schools have held fundraisers to help the Giamanco family.

Mitchell Principal Ben Day said the school did a coin drive and a pajama day. Students paid $2 and could wear pajamas to school. All the proceeds from both went to the family.

King Principal Anthony Gelsone said they also did a pajama day and were organizing a coin drive. The school, along with some local businesses, also sold rubber bracelets to raise money. Emilee was a student at King before her diagnosis.

Marissa Giamanco said Emilee has been handling the radiation well, but it had to be “boosted” a little bit in December. Emilee said the treatment isn’t that bad and that it just makes her tired.

Her mom also said she’s been having a hard time losing her hair but is remaining positive.

“She’s not shaving her head,” Marissa Giamanco said. “She will keep her hair as long as it’s there.”

Despite the treatment and difficulties of being away from their family and friends, the Giamancos said they are making the best of being in Utah.

“She loves it up in Salt Lake with the snow,” Joe Giamanco said. “She plays in it every day. She’s still the same kid … and handling it very well.”

Marissa Giamanco also said their two other children, Natalee and Preston, have enjoyed the snow and are adjusting to life in another state.

Joe and Marissa Giamanco said they are hopeful Emilee will beat this disease.

“There’s something different about Emilee. … We have to hold on to that,” he said. “At the end of the day, her body is strong and dealing with this the way no one else has.”

Now that her radiation is completed, doctors and the family are deciding the next step in her treatment.

For updates on Emilee, go to http://www.gofundme.com/f/hope-for-emilee.

Contact reporter Celia Shortt Goodyear at cgoodyear@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow her on Twitter @csgoodyear.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
Bobcats hitting their stride this year

The halls of Garrett Junior High School are filled with energy and excitement, as we finish our first quarter of the year.

Trimming keeps trees healthy, property safe

Oh, how we love the cooling shade from a glorious tree, especially during this exceptionally hot Indian summer. With deciduous (leaf dropping) trees well through their growing season, it’s now that we find overgrown branches hanging over or hitting houses, encroaching on neighbors’ property, entangling power/cable lines, etc.

Breast Cancer Awareness Month

“When I think about where we were with breast cancer 30 years ago and where we are now, the advances have just been remarkable: better diagnostics, better medical therapy, better surgical therapy, better radiation therapy, and most important, a better understanding of the disease,” said Dr. Larry Norton, founding member, Breast Cancer Research Foundation.

Eight inducted into Hall of Fame

Boulder City High School has had a long history of success when it comes to its sports programs and athletes, as evident by the somewhat-new Eagle sign entering town, which touts the school’s 134 team state championships.

King’s enrollment lower than expected this year

Each year, the Clark County School District’s Department of Demographics and Zoning creates an enrollment projection for each school. The money that schools use to hire new teachers and purchase supplies over the summer is based on that student enrollment projection.

Health registries available at VA

Most Americans (the adults, anyway) are aware that in the 1960s and early 70s the U.S. military doused service people in Vietnam and environs with poison chemicals that caused many illnesses and death.

Best BMX in the Silver State

Photos courtesy Anabel Smith

Garrett offers exciting new programs, opportunities

Garrett Junior High School is off to an incredible start this year, with exciting new programs, expanded opportunities for learning, and a dedicated team ready to support our students.

Soaring like an Eagle

By Abby Francis