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Ruth Nadine Picardie (1 May 1964, Reading, Berkshire, England, UK – 22 September 1997) was an English journalist and editor. ==Biography== The daughter of South African émigrés, she read Social Anthropology at King's College, Cambridge, Ruth Picardie worked as an editor and journalist for ''The Guardian'' and ''The Independent'' newspapers in the UK. She also contributed to other publications, such as the ''New Statesman''. Her memoir of living with breast cancer, ''Before I Say Goodbye'', was published posthumously, culled from five columns written for the ''Observers magazine ''Life'', and from her personal correspondence. These were collected and edited by her husband, Matt Seaton and her sister, Justine Picardie. She married Matt Seaton in Worthing, West Sussex in 1994. They had two children, twins Joe Louis and Lola May (born 1995, Lambeth). He is a keen competitive cyclist, is the author of ''The Escape Artist'', which concentrates on his love of amateur cycling but also chronicled his wife's struggle with breast cancer. Ruth Picardie died in Lambeth, London, aged 33. Justine Picardie established (The Lavender Trust ) in her sister's memory. The Trust focuses on raising funds and support for younger women battling breast cancer. Picardie's surgeon, Puvaneswary Markandoo, was subsequently responsible for other misdiagnosis and negligence in surgical operations on women, and was erased from the medical register ('struck off') by the General Medical Council in December 2011.〔Sarah Boseley ("Surgeon who missed Ruth Picardie breast cancer struck off by GMC" ), ''The Guardian'', 30 December 2011〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ruth Picardie」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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