Beloved Channel 7 sports presenter Mel McLaughlin has returned to our screens for the first time since going public with her cancer diagnosis.
McLaughlin returned to her customary role on the sports desk on Sunday night for 7NEWS Sydneyâs 6pm bulletin.
Itâs the first time she has been on screen since early January and came a month after she revealed she had been diagnosed with lung cancer.
âGreat to be back, I missed both of your pretty faces,â she said to co-anchors Mark Ferguson and Angela Cox.
âI really want to thank everyone for all their well wishes over the past couple of months. Itâs been truly overwhelming and itâs appreciated, so thanks everyone.â
Cox added: âWe couldnât be happier to have you back.â
And Ferguson said it was âso goodâ before adding that McLaughlin has âstill got itâ.
âMelâs easing back at her own pace,â Director of News and Current Affairs Ray Kuka said.
âSheâll do a few days here and there whenever she feels up to it.
âShe has our full support and no doubt the full support of Sydney.â
Last month, McLaughlin made the shock reveal that she is battling lung cancer.
She underwent surgery to remove half her lung.
âItâs just very traumatic, itâs very triggering, itâs just a lot of emotions,â she said.
âIn our family lung cancer meant death. We had one example, and we lost her.â
Her family has heard the âC wordâ before and it ended in tragedy: Melâs sister Tara died from lung cancer in 2015 at 39 years old.
The thought of entering North Shore Private again â with the memory of her sisterâs passing â was nothing short of heavy.
âI cried and then I laughed, thinking, âis this a joke?ââ McLaughlin said.
McLaughlin opened up on her lung cancer journey because sheâs benefited from an early diagnosis and wants others too as well.
Her tumour was detected at an early stage.
McLaughlinâs surgeon Dr Levi Bassin said he rarely sees anyone that early â which made the conversation a very different one to his usual.
Dr Bassin was interviewed by Mel as she tries to increase awareness of lung cancer.
âI canât imagine what that would have been like to be in the same ICU your sister was in, and the same disease. It is crazy,â Dr Bassin said.
The doctor used a Da Vinci surgery robot nicknamed Tay Tay for the medical staffâs penchant for a Taylor Swift hit to inspire hours-long pressure.
The robot is designed to be placed into war zones to operate on soldiers and is now saving lives in Australia.
Its delicate procedure has had incredible success.
Doctors suspect a genetic mutation triggered Melâs cancer but a different mutation to her sisterâs.
âWe looked at the genetics and we donât think theyâre related, but they must be I would think, itâs too weird otherwise,â Dr Bassin said.
What was different â McLaughlinâs tumour was detected early. Taraâs was sadly too late and at a stage where surgery couldnât be relied on to save her life.
âI definitely think she was looking out for me. Thatâs what they do, big sisters,â she said.
The recovery will be slow but it is going well.
âRecovery is slow but good. The reason why Iâm talking is not to make it about me, but awareness,â she said.
âItâs the biggest cancer killer in the country. Itâs got a terrible stigma. I feel like I owe it to my sister and I owe it to people who could get something out of this.â
Raising awareness for lung cancer
The Cancer Council says lung cancer is responsible for almost one in five cancer deaths in Australia and is the leading cause of cancer death in the nation.
The organisation estimates 15,122 people were diagnosed with lung cancer in 2024 with the average age at diagnosis 72 years old.
Symptoms for lung cancer include shortness of breath, changes to the voice such as hoarseness, chest pain, coughing or spitting up blood, a new cough that does not go away, chest infection that lasts more than three weeks or keeps coming back, enlarged fingertips, loss of appetite, unexplained weight loss and tiredness.
The Cancer Council promotes the National Lung Cancer Screening Program â a free initiative from the Australian government designed to detect lung cancer early in people most at risk.
The program uses a CT scan to look for lung nodules before symptoms appear and is eligible to millions of Australians on Medicare.
And for people dealing with a diagnosis, the Cancer Council reminds people that if found early, over 65 per cent of lung cancers can be successfully treated with less invasive procedures.
âThe earlier the cancer is found the better the treatment outcomes will be,â the organisation says.



