Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Rob Ford released from hospital after chemo

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 24 Sep, 2014 10:15 AM
    TORONTO - Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has been released from a hospital where he has been undergoing chemotherapy for a rare form of cancer.
     
    A statement from his office says Ford left the city's Mount Sinai Hospital on Tuesday afternoon and has returned home where he is "resting with his family."
     
    The brief statement also says Ford would like to thank the staff who treated him for their "exceptional level of care," and expresses the mayor's gratitude for the support he's received from Toronto residents ever since it was announced that he had a tumour.
     
    Ford has spent the past two weeks in hospital after seeking medical attention for unbearable abdominal pain.
     
    Initial tests revealed he had an abdominal tumour and last Wednesday, doctors diagnosed him with liposarcoma — a type of cancer that arises from fat cells and can attack a variety of soft tissues.
     
    Ford's doctor said the mayor would be undergoing two rounds of chemotherapy before determining the next steps in his treatment.
     
    Ford, whose time in office has been marked by a series of scandals, has dropped his plan to seeks re-election and has been replaced in the race for mayor by his older brother.
     
    Last week, in an audio recording from his hospital bed, a frail-sounding Ford implored Toronto voters to elect his sibling to succeed him.
     
    "With the love and support of my family, my friends, and the people of Toronto — I will beat this," he said in the three-minute statement. "I am determined to face this head on and return strong for my family and for my city."
     
    News of Ford's cancer has made headlines around the world and has drawn expressions of sympathy from politicians of all stripes, including Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
     
    The diagnosis came just over two months after Ford returned to office from a stint in rehab for substance abuse issues.
     
    The mayor has turned into an international celebrity over the past year due to a series of scandals touched off by reports of a video appearing to show him smoking crack cocaine.
     
    His role as mayor has been largely symbolic since last November, when he was stripped of most of his powers following his admissions of alcohol abuse and drug use during "drunken stupors."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP's controversial satellite-office expenses offside, Commons committee rules

    NDP's controversial satellite-office expenses offside, Commons committee rules
    The committee that oversees House of Commons spending says the Opposition New Democrats owe a "significant" sum for salaries improperly paid to aides who worked out of satellite party offices in Quebec.

    NDP's controversial satellite-office expenses offside, Commons committee rules

    Monument to missing, murdered aboriginal woman unveiled in Winnipeg

    Monument to missing, murdered aboriginal woman unveiled in Winnipeg
    A small monument to missing and murdered aboriginal women has been unveiled in Winnipeg.

    Monument to missing, murdered aboriginal woman unveiled in Winnipeg

    Toronto police chief serves Rob Ford's brother with defamation notice

    Toronto police chief serves Rob Ford's brother with defamation notice
    Toronto's police chief has filed a defamation notice against Mayor Rob Ford's brother for comments the city councillor made earlier this month.

    Toronto police chief serves Rob Ford's brother with defamation notice

    First Nations health officials to start salmon testing after B.C. mine spill

    First Nations health officials to start salmon testing after B.C. mine spill
    LIKELY, B.C. - First Nations health officials are preparing to test salmon near the site of a massive mine tailing spill in British Columbia amid fears in aboriginal communities that fish from affected lakes and rivers aren't safe to eat.

    First Nations health officials to start salmon testing after B.C. mine spill

    Bloc MP Fortin quits; says the party no longer exists under new leader

    Bloc MP Fortin quits; says the party no longer exists under new leader
    Bloc Quebecois MP Jean-Francois Fortin quit the party Tuesday, accusing its new leader of being divisive and radical.

    Bloc MP Fortin quits; says the party no longer exists under new leader

    Wildfire Closes Regional B.C. Highway as Dry Conditions Mean More Campfire Bans

    Wildfire Closes Regional B.C. Highway as Dry Conditions Mean More Campfire Bans
    VANCOUVER - A wildfire has closed a section of Highway 20 west of Alexis Creek in B.C.'s Cariboo region.

    Wildfire Closes Regional B.C. Highway as Dry Conditions Mean More Campfire Bans