7/4/25
7/2/25
Peas Mixed with Chromosomes?
Something that I find sad and frustrating as a hereditary cancer advocate is just how little people know about genetics. It's really hard to have a serious discussion about inherited genetic mutations and hereditary cancer awareness and prevention when people have no clue what genes really are and what they actually do.
So I created this free* resource to
introduce kids to genomic science. (And with the hope that many adults will
find it educational as well.)
It can be downloaded at www.genetionary.org/DNA
6/11/25
Celebrating Previvor Day on Father's Day Again
When my daughter was born in 1993, the announcement about the discovery of the tumor suppressor gene BRCA2 was a couple years away. And the coining of the word “previvor” was still several years off. Both of those future events would turn out to be profoundly significant.
In 2017, my daughter had genetic testing and learned she had inherited a mutation in one of her BRCA2 genes. A mutation that we now know to have been passed down in her mother’s family for centuries. That’s right, centuries. Knowledge of the mutation has allowed my daughter to take steps to significantly reduce her cancer risk. She is a previvor.
As part of our effort to raise hereditary cancer prevention awareness, I set out to design a previvor shirt for my daughter. But I soon realized that there wasn’t really a symbol for previvorship. So I sat down at my drawing table and sketched out about a dozen designs before settling on this one. I wanted the symbol to be unique and open for personal interpretation. But with no cancer ribbon in the design.
This coming Father’s Day, I will be celebrating my daughter’s previvorship and courage. And I will also be celebrating the science that has given my child a chance to live a full life cancer-free. A life her late mother did not get.
6/7/25
Hereditary Cancer Red Flags Checklist
With at least 1 in 279 people at risk of hereditary cancer, this checklist should be a standard in every healthcare professional’s office. Download a PDF of it as well as other useful infographics about hereditary cancer at www.genetionary.org
5/14/25
Germline Mutations: Illustrating the Cycle of Hereditary Cancer in Families
After my late wife was diagnosed
with hereditary cancer, I quickly learned that trying to explain germline
mutations and genetic inheritance to anyone who cared enough to ask questions
was not an easy task. Especially since it seemed like a lot of people lacked a
basic understanding of biology.
Now that I’m a hereditary cancer awareness and
prevention advocate, I try to use my extensive illustration and editorial
experience to create infographics that introduce and explain genetic mutations
and hereditary cancer on a basic level. I hope it makes it a little easier to
understand a very complex subject. And I hope it encourages more genetic counseling
and testing and helps save some lives as well.
This graphic can be downloaded at: www.genetionary.org/resources. Please pass it along.
5/5/25
On Cinco de Mayo
Since it's Cinco de Mayo, I thought I'd share this.
Sometimes interesting and sometimes
frustrating, a lot of my work has taken on a life of its own over the years.
It’s really not unusual to see something I created over the course of my long career
being used on the internet or when I travel about. (Sometimes authorized,
sometimes not.)
(Ask me about some of my Discovery (Channel) Education
Clip Art Gallery images someday.)