“not long after all that, i met my husband and we moved to calgary,” she says. “that changed the whole trajectory because i saw a new gastroenterologist. i started taking a treatment, based on his recommendation, and it worked amazingly for years.”
the next health challenge for zelinsky came in 2010, when she was diagnosed with breast cancer and had to face more surgery and therapy. this was complicated by her crohn’s because the treatments for the two conditions were in conflict. around the same time, the treatment she was using to treat her ibd was no longer proving effective for her.
she was prescribed another treatment, which, she says, never worked as well as the original. after four years on it and two additional intestinal surgeries to deal with strictures, she asked for a different medication.
“i knew i was running out of options,” she says, adding that she has always believed in quality of life rather than longevity. the next treatment, which she has been using for the last year, however, “seems to be working well.”
it has been a long and difficult journey toward stability for zelinsky, as it has been for many others. this is why it is important for patients to stay informed about their treatment and have access to the treatments that work for them.