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caroline kennedydaughter Tatiana Schlossberg Has been diagnosed with terminal cancer.
The 35-year-old mother of two revealed her diagnosis in an article published by The New York Times new yorker Saturday, November 22nd. She was battling acute myeloid leukemia and had just one year to live.
Tatiana, 67, Kennedy, who lives with her husband Edwin SchlossbergShe learned of her diagnosis in May 2024 after giving birth to her second child. Her doctors noticed an imbalance in her white blood cell count and first assumed it was related to pregnancy and childbirth, before discovering she had “a rare mutation called inversion 3.”
After the environmental journalist was first told she would need to endure months of chemotherapy and undergo a bone marrow transplant, she was told there was “no cure” with standard treatments.
“I don’t – can’t – believe what they’re talking about about me. I swam a mile in the pool the day before when I was nine months pregnant. I’m not sick. I’m not feeling sick. I’m actually one of the healthiest people I know,” Tatiana wrote in the letter. new yorker. “I have a son that I love most and a newborn that I need to take care of.”
she and her husband George MoranThey got married in 2017 and have a 3-year-old son and 18-month-old daughter.
Tatiana praised her husband for his undying support, saying, “George did everything he could for me. He talked to all the doctors and insurance people I didn’t want to talk to; he slept on the hospital floor; he didn’t get mad when I took steroids and yelled that I didn’t like Schweppes Ginger Ale, only Canada Dry. He would come home and put our kids to bed and come back to pick me up for dinner.” “
She added, “I know not everyone can marry a doctor, but if you can, it’s a really good idea. He was perfect and I feel so cheated and sad that I can’t continue to live a wonderful life with this kind, funny, handsome genius that I found.”

Prince William visits the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum with U.S. Ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy, Jack Kennedy Schlossberg (second from left) and Tatiana Kennedy Schlossberg on December 2, 2022 in Boston, Massachusetts.
MATT STONE/POOL/AFP) (Photo by MATT STONE/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)After giving birth to her daughter, Tatiana spent five weeks at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital before being transferred to Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital for a bone marrow transplant. She also receive chemotherapy At home.
In January, she enrolled in a clinical trial for CAR-T cell therapy, a type of immunotherapy that targets certain blood cancers, but eventually realized her life expectancy.
“My first thought was that my children wouldn’t remember me, that their face would forever be on the inside of my eyelids,” she said when she learned of her terminal diagnosis. “My son may have some memories, but he may start to confuse them with pictures he sees or stories he hears. I never really cared for my daughter—I couldn’t change her diaper, bathe her, or feed her, all because of the risk of post-transplant infection. I was gone for almost half of her first year. I don’t know who she thought I was or whether she would feel or remember me as her mom when I was gone.”
Tatiana shared that her parents and brothers and sistersSister Rose, 37, and brother Jack, 32, have been by her side to help take care of the children.
“When I suffered, they held my hand firmly and tried not to show their pain and sadness to protect me from hurt. It was a great gift, even though I felt their pain every day,” Tatiana shared.
She also expressed her great sadness for her family, especially her mother, whom she had always tried to “protect” and “never make her sad or angry.”
“Now I have added a new level of tragedy to her life and our family’s life, and there is nothing I can do to stop it,” she wrote.