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βTodayβ star Jill Martin is still dealing with health issues stemming from her cancer battle.
The 49-year-old journalist revealed that she has to undergo emergency surgery due to complications from treatment for breast cancer.
βJust when you think the fight is over, life reminds you that healing isnβt always linear,β Martin told βTodayβ on Friday.
βItβs preventative and proactive β an emergency only in the sense that if we donβt act now, it could turn into something much bigger,βΒ Martin added.Β βItβs important to say this clearly: my cancer is not back.β
Dr. Elisa Port, chief of breast surgery for the Mount Sinai Health System, who treated Martin,Β explained to βTodayβ that Martinβs treatment caused a breakdown in her skin.
βWhen a person has a mastectomy, obviously the goal is to get all the breast cancer out,βΒ said Port. βBut thereβs another goal, especially in aΒ BRCA mutation carrierΒ like Jill β¦ to get all the breast tissue out. And when you do that, the skin left behind can be very thin. β¦ Itβs just a lot for the skin to tolerate.β
Port also said that if they donβt perform surgery immediately on Martin,Β she could suffer a sudden opening of the wound which could lead to an infection.
Martin will be in the hospital for at least three nights and then spend a few weeks recovering at home.
βI feel worn out and grateful all at once,β she shared. βSometimes it feels like it never really ends. And still β Iβm grateful. Grateful for early action, for great doctors, and for the chance to keep moving forward.β
Martin announced her breast cancer diagnosis in July 2023 during anΒ episode of the NBC show. The journalist revealed she would undergo a double mastectomy.Β
She went on to have 16 lymph nodes removed and underwent four months of chemotherapy, reconstructive surgery, three weeks of radiation, and a preventative procedure to remove her ovaries and fallopian tubes.Β
In Oct. 2024, Martin told Us Weekly, βIβve spent the last year just trying to save my life. And now, Iβm dealing with the mental trauma of it all.β
βAnd I thinkΒ a lot ofΒ survivors will tell you, itβs never over. Itβs not like, βWhen are you done?β or βIs it over?β Itβs never over,β she added. βThisΒ is a fight I will fight my entire life. I think about chemotherapy every single day.β
Martin also explained to the outlet that itβs her βmission in lifeβ to raise awareness for the disease and to encourage others to get tested for breast cancer.Β

