Hamon's physical state didn't improve.
After 32 grueling treatments, Hamon was finally pronounced cancer-free.
Both Hamon and Reis had serious problems that required the attention of a dermatologist.
Hamon was referred to one of the best dermatologic
surgeons in the area: Dr. Coldiron.
But then, in May of 2010 as Hamon was mowing the lawn,
a tree branch clipped his right ear.
Second, those aging boomers, like Hamon, worked, played, and relaxed
in the sun for decades, blissfully ignorant of the consequences.
It was on one of those evenings, in early 2005, while Hamon was wrestling around with his grandson on the living-room floor,
that the 9-year-old made a discovery.
Hamon went to his family practitioner,
but all the doctor could do with his limited dermatological training was assist in trying to find a time, a cancellation, anything with an area dermatologist.
Having learned from his potentially fatal mistake 5 years earlier, Hamon phoned his dermatologist in Aurora and was told
the doctor would be able to see him- in 4 to 6 months.
Even after he and his primary-care physician explained to various receptionists that aggressive cancer had been in the
very spot that was now bleeding, Hamon still had to wait 4 months to be examined.
The doctor booked him for an appointment the following week,
and it was then that Hamon learned the patch was cancerous-
an aggressive form of squamous-cell carcinoma that had spread to his parotids, the body's largest salivary glands.
In 2017 French presidential candidates Benoit Hamon and Jean-Luc Bennahmias proposed plan to introduce
a universal basic income of €750(£655) a month, in what they described as a bid to combat the threat of robots taking over three million jobs.
But if first-round supporters of
François Fillon, Jean-Luc Mélenchon, socialist Benoît Hamon, or the lesser candidates do not come out for Macron-
many of them see him as just a continuation of the dreadful Hollande government- Le Pen could have a chance.