Camilla 'in strong spirits and trying to support Charles' after cancer diagnosis

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Camilla
Camilla 'in strong spirits and trying to support Charles' after cancer diagnosis

In the face of her husband King Charles' cancer diagnosis, Queen Camilla is staying strong for them both.

Maggie's chief executive Dame Laura Lee said Camilla is in 'strong spirits' and will be thinking about 'how best to support' her husband. The charity boss made the remarks after witnessing Camilla's "compassionate" work as president of the organisation over the last 15 years. She launched a Maggie's centre at the Royal Free Hospital in London last week, just days before the King's diagnosis was announced.

Dame Laura says the Queen is "very knowledgeable" about how the heartbreaking disease and how it can impact families. She explained that Camilla's notable work has given her an understanding of the "role of support that she will undoubtedly be offering the King during this time," and commended Charles for showing patients they are 'not alone'.

She told BBC Breakfast: "As ever, the Queen was in good and strong spirits. She has been in and visited many of our Maggie's centres and so it was a day of work for her, of coming and helping us celebrate and open the centre.

Camilla 'in strong spirits and trying to support Charles' after cancer diagnosis dqxikeidqkikdinvKing Charles leaving the London Clinic after his procedure (UK Press via Getty Images)
Camilla 'in strong spirits and trying to support Charles' after cancer diagnosisCamilla will support Charles the best way she knows how, says expert (Ian Vogler / Daily Mirror)

"So, obviously, we know this information about King Charles after that visit, but during it she sat down, as she does in all of our centres, with a group of people affected by cancer, who talked about their own stories, about how they had navigated the challenges of cancer, and how important support was for them.

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"So the Queen is very knowledgeable about the impact of cancer and is very compassionate and empathic in terms of understanding the impact and role of support that she will undoubtedly be offering the King during this time."

She added: "I think she [ Camilla ] understands that cancer is a very specific experience for each individual, but that it's also the family that are going through it. So she will be thinking about how best to support the King, but she will also be thinking about the rest of the family - Prince William - and also about supporting the King in his wishes to keep fully active and working through treatment."

Dame Laura said a cancer diagnosis can be a "process of adjustment", adding: "We've all been feeling the shock of hearing this news and that's the same for any family. And then it's adjusting to: what are the treatment options? What are the paths ahead? What are some of the decisions that I need to make? How will that affect my daily life? How can I keep my work going forward?

"And it is allowing time for everyone to start to adjust to that news and to understand what's ahead, and it's as important for the person with cancer as well as the family members. And I think what we can see that's happening here is the King has done a wonderful job of telling us about his cancer diagnosis.

"So he's telling others that he's going through this, that they are not alone. He is with them on that. But he's also giving his time to his family to come to terms with what's going on and to what might lie ahead." Camilla has been president of Maggie's since 2008. The charity supports cancer patients and their families, with its 24 centres all based in hospital grounds.

The charity was founded by Maggie Keswick Jencks, and her husband, Charles Jencks, after she received a second cancer diagnosis in 1993 and was moved to a windowless corridor with her partner to process the news. The couple discussed the need for somewhere better for people with cancer to go, and the first centre opened in 1996 in Edinburgh.

Monica Charsley

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