‘America’s Next Top Model’ Contestant Jael Strauss Dies of Breast Cancer 2 Months After Announcement

‘America’s Next Top Model’ Contestant Jael Strauss Dies of Breast Cancer 2 Months After Announcement
Jael Strauss, a contestant on “America’s Next Top Model,” died of breast cancer two months after she was reportedly diagnosed with the disease, TMZ reported on Dec. 4, 2018. Jael Strauss/Instagram selfie
Jack Phillips
Updated:
Jael Strauss, a contestant on “America’s Next Top Model,” died of breast cancer two months after she announced she was diagnosed with the disease, TMZ reported on Dec. 4.

Strauss, who competed on season eight of the show, died in hospice care at around 11 a.m. after her health declined on the night of Dec. 3, the website reported, citing sources close to the matter. The report said she was “unconscious for a few days and her family recently stopped allowing visitors.”

She stopped her chemotherapy on Oct. 31 and went into hospice care on Thanksgiving Day.

“First night in hospice. So many things I never knew about life. Or death. So many things,” she wrote on Facebook about the move.

“The one blessing was that we were able to show her how loved she was before she passed. She brought so much light to people,” her family said about her death, according to Entertainment Weekly.

Diagnosis

In October, Strauss revealed she had incurable stage IV breast cancer. “I was gonna write some long thing but some of you guys deserve to know. On October 2nd I was diagnosed with stage IV breast cancer,” she wrote.

She added: “It has aggressively spread throughout my body and is incurable. With treatment it may prolong my life longer than the ‘few months’ doctors said I could make it. I don’t want to die. I need another one of those miracles that I got back in 2013.”

A GoFundMe page was set up for her.

“Over the last two weeks, Jael managed to be discharged from the hospital to come home and continue outpatient chemotherapy. She was home for several days, but was experiencing a great deal of pain and discomfort due to her abdomen continuing to gradually become extremely distended and firm. This eventually brought her back to the emergency room, and she was admitted to the hospital again,” the page read in an update before her death.

It added: “The chemotherapy has been brutal for her, and it has taken its toll on her. Due to the overwhelming sickness associated with the chemo, she has made the decision to stop chemotherapy at this time.”

“She is pursuing other forms of treatment, including but not limited to the possibility of a different type of chemotherapy which may have fewer side effects. A CT scan has revealed that the tumors in her breast and abdomen have become smaller, while the tumors around her ovaries have become larger.”

The Mayo Clinic says stage IV cancer indicates that the cancer has spread to the rest of her body.
“Stage IV describes invasive breast cancer that has spread beyond the breast and nearby lymph nodes to other organs of the body, such as the lungs, distant lymph nodes, skin, bones, liver, or brain,” according to BreastCancer.org.
Stage IV, or metastatic breast cancer, isn’t the same for everyone. The National Breast Cancer Foundation says stage IV symptoms depend on the degree to which the cancer has spread.
Most women with stage IV breast cancer are treated with hormone therapy, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, or some combination thereof.
Jack Phillips
Jack Phillips
Breaking News Reporter
Jack Phillips is a breaking news reporter who covers a range of topics, including politics, U.S., and health news. A father of two, Jack grew up in California's Central Valley. Follow him on X: https://twitter.com/jackphillips5
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