Doctors are seeing more non-smokers, especially women, with later-stage lung cancer
TORONTO — Katie Hulan’s family doctor thought she might have asthma.
Her cough, which had started about a month and a half earlier, was getting progressively worse. So he gave her some puffers to try, but they didn’t work.
“I was just getting to the point where I couldn’t speak at work,” said the 37-year-old tech marketing manager.
“At the end of the day, I would be in pain just from the shaking and coughing.”
