The story of a British mother in her 20s who gave up chemotherapy to protect her baby and gave birth with one leg amputated is deeply touching.



According to the Daily Mail, 28-year-old Kathleen Osborne from Wiz Beach, Cambridgeshire, suffered a leg pain in November of last year and went to the hospital for a magnetic resonance imaging MRI scan.



It was the fact that the osteosarcoma of the right leg I suffered from in 2005 recurred, and I was 4 months pregnant.



The doctors gave Osbourne a week to decide, saying she had to choose between having her right leg treated with chemotherapy after the abortion, or having her right leg amputated and then having a baby.



Osbourne, who already has two sons, aged 9 and 5, was worried, but the very next day she went to the doctor and told her that she would amputate her leg.




“I was with my friends that evening when I heard the news, and I cried a lot,” Osborne said.



On November 17 last year, ten days after seeing the doctor, he underwent an operation to amputate the entire right leg below the pelvis.



Even in this situation, he was worried that his children would be shocked to see him lose his leg, and he showed his wits using 'Transformers', a transforming robot movie that children love.



"Something bad happened to my mother's leg and the doctor needed to take it off," Osborne told her two sons, "but Transformers will make a new one for you."



"Then my sons reacted like, 'Really? Cool!'" he said.




However, as the birth date was approaching, another MRI examination revealed that Osborne had lung cancer, and was diagnosed with a clear blueprint that the operation had progressed to a difficult stage.



Osborne was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2016 and was cured in 2017, but it recurred.



As a result, he was faced with a situation where he had to give birth eight weeks earlier than his due date.



"The doctors gave me a limited time of just two days to prepare for the birth," Osborne said.



Fortunately, on March 12, last year, my daughter Aida May was born healthy.



He is currently undergoing chemotherapy and is focusing on making memories with his three children.



(Photo=Facebook capture, Yonhap News)