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How This 16-Year-Old Helped His Family Thrive After Dad’s Colon Cancer Diagnosis
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How This 16-Year-Old Helped His Family Thrive After Dad’s Colon Cancer Diagnosis

Healthline · May 6, 2026, 3:00 AM · Also reported by 1 other source

Why this matters: health reporting relevant to everyday decisions and well-being.

Dylan Kurtz (right) with his parents and brother. Photography courtesy of Dylan Kurtz As colorectal cancer increases among people under 50, more children may experience watching a parent face this disease. Dylan Kurtz shares what it was like to watch his dad get treated for colon cancer while he was a teenager. Now, 22, Kurtz wants to spread awareness about colorectal cancer and help other young people cope with a parent’s diagnosis. On Dylan Kurtz’s 16th Birthday in 2020, his dad, Jonathan, began chemotherapy to treat stage 3 colon cancer. “I didn’t really know much of anything about colon cancer other than it was cancer in the colon,” Kurtz told Healthline. “I knew of different types of cancer but didn’t really know anything about what it meant for the person diagnosed, other than that it can be deadly, if it’s caught late.” Emotionally, he was uncertain about his dad’s outlook. “Then, after my dad talked me through everything that was going to happen, he was going to do radiation and then chemotherapy for a few months, I began to understand how serious it was,” said Kurtz. Because a parent’s cancer diagnosis can bring fear, confusion, or worry, Marianne Pearson, MSW, LCSW, vice president of Cancer Care at the Colorectal Cancer Alliance, said honest, age-appropriate communication is needed. “[Including] explaining treatments like chemotherapy or radiation and even visiting the cancer center can help reduce fear, while support from oncology-trained professionals can help children feel safer and more secure,” she told Healthline. After Kurtz’s dad talked with him, he quickly learned that his condition would impact the whole family, including his mom and brother. His mom informed him that while his dad went through treatment, he wouldn’t be able to do the things they typically enjoyed together, like attend professional baseball games and engage in outdoor activities like running. “I was really sad because all these things that I love to do with my dad tend to be very

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