From Deseret News archives:

Toxic Utah: Ghosts in the wind

Published: Thursday, Feb. 15, 2001 11:10 a.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
At the time, she was trying to keep her daughter double-covered in insurance by putting in 20 hours a week as a checker at Albertson's grocery store. Bethany's dad, Philip, still works as finance director for the city of St. George.

Bethany was in remission and off treatment by fall 1987. Her hair had grown back, and the girl was excited about returning to school. She'd bought all her new school clothes and was attending first grade at Sunset Elementary on the day her nose started bleeding and wouldn't stop.

Doctors confirmed acute monoblastic leukemia.

"I curled up on the bed and cried all day," Peterson said. "It tore at my heart. It's bad enough when they're babies, but now I had a 6-year-old saying to me, 'I don't want any more pokes.' She knew what she was in for."

The same day, Claudia's sister Cathy — hospitalized with terminal melanoma cancer the family believes is fallout-related — fell into a coma.

"The day my sister died, I crawled up on the hospital bed with Cathy and told her, 'You've got to come get Bethany when it's time to go.' She was in a coma, but I know she heard me."

Bethany watched everything intently at Aunt Cathy's funeral. The next week she talked about dying and seeing Jesus and dogs in heaven. With her sweet 6-year-old words, she comforted her mother.

Story continues below
She deteriorated quickly at the end. Her blood was poisoned. Doctors pumped blood and platelets into her as fast as they could. She was in excruciating pain.

The day before she died, Bethany had a 105-degree fever and tears bloody with the sepsis that eventually took her over. In a quiet moment, the girl looked past her mother sitting at her bedside. Her red eyes spotted something beyond. "Look Mom, there's Aunt Cathy dancing on the table."

The next day, Bethany was gone.


E-mail: lucy@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Blaine Johnson talks about a 1980 Life magazine story on the downwinders of southern Utah. Johnson's daughter, Sybil, died at age 12 from cancer likely caused by Nevada nuclear tests.

previousnext

Latest comments

innocuous...thanks online dictionary

Religion in politics is tiresome

"STOP, right there!!! Mike Richards, I am liberal. I am LDS. I do not...

Utes won't respond to Hall

I just don't get it. Why do football fans get so worked up about a game and...

Religion in politics is not the problem. Disrespect for religion is the...

Utes won't respond to Hall

I'm with you.. I will be paying ANY price to have a seat in RES next year.....

Thanks Max, for defending your family and religion from the modern-day mob....

Max Hall issues apology

I was at the game in Provo on Saturday night. It is sad that Max Hall's...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

It's fun to sit back and watch as BOTH BYU and Utah fans make fools out of...

Alta rejects canyon subdivision

Dear Alta Extremist, " Some day a property owner is going to get sick &...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Too bad that Bronco , Holmoe , and the University didn't gave the guts to do...

Advertisements