Elle McPherson.
Pablo Blazquez Dominguez/Getty ImagesElle Macpherson She is doubling down on her decision to refuse chemotherapy during her battle with breast cancer.
“Let’s be clear, I took a lot of medical advice,” McPherson, 60, told The Australian newspaper on Monday, September 9. Today show. “It was very interesting, because every doctor had different opinions about treating my specific case of breast cancer.”
He added: “There was no clear path and [were] There are no guarantees either way. So, I made the decision based on whatever information I gathered and what felt right for me.
Macpherson revealed earlier this month that she was diagnosed with breast cancer after having a lumpectomy seven years ago. She was initially advised to have a mastectomy, chemotherapy, hormone therapy and breast reconstruction surgery — all treatments she turned down in favor of “an intuitive, heart-driven, holistic approach.”
Macpherson of Australia Women’s Weekly On September 2, he said the diagnosis was “a shock” and “unexpected”, but called it “an opportunity to dig deeper and find alternative solutions”.
“I realized that I would need my truth, my belief system to support me through this. And that’s what I did,” she added. “So, it was an amazing exercise in being true to myself, trusting myself, and trusting the nature of my body and the way I chose to act.”
The model is currently in a state of improvement.
McPherson also wrote about her holistic approach to cancer treatment in her memoir. Ellie: Life, lessons and learning to trust yourselfWhich is going to be released in November.

“Rejecting standard medical solutions was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life,” he wrote in an excerpt published earlier this month. “But rejecting my own inner spirit would have been even harder.”
Even though people thought McPherson was “crazy,” she still had to make the best decision for herself.
“Sometimes an authentic decision made from the heart may not make sense to others… but it doesn’t have to,” she wrote. “For me, it meant addressing the emotional and physical factors associated with breast cancer. It was a time of deep, internal reflection. And it took courage.”
Her family — which includes her sons Flynn, 26, and Cy, 21 — were skeptical about the holistic treatment. Arpad Busson He also didn’t agree with the choice, but still shared a message of support for the model.
During an interview on Today Australia on Monday, Macpherson clarified that her upcoming book “is not about cancer.” She added: “The focus on it is really distorted. It’s distorting the rest of the gems that are in the book.”