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Science & HealthThursday, July 2, 2026

Influencers on Two Continents Reveal Cancer Diagnoses, Turning to Social Media for Support

Public disclosures by Nara Smith in South Africa and Jazmín La Cuerpo in Argentina highlight how content creators are using their platforms to seek medical advice and share the burden of serious illness.

Two social media personalities with large followings on separate continents have disclosed serious cancer diagnoses within their immediate families, shifting their online presence from lifestyle content to personal health crises. South African model and cookbook author Nara Smith revealed that her two-year-old daughter, Whimsy Lou, was diagnosed with an unspecified cancer late last year and has begun chemotherapy. In Argentina, influencer Jazmín Salinas, known as La Cuerpo, announced that she has two tumours in both eyeballs, a condition she says is rapidly compromising her vision. Both disclosures, made via Instagram, have drawn an outpouring of public sympathy and, in Salinas’s case, a direct appeal for specialist referrals.

Smith described noticing “something suspicious” on her daughter and taking her to an emergency room, where initial assessments were inconclusive. A paediatrician’s quiet demeanour during a follow-up visit prompted what she called a mother’s intuition that the child had cancer. Subsequent biopsies at a children’s hospital confirmed the disease had spread, and doctors ordered immediate chemotherapy. Smith, who has four children including a newborn, said she has turned to online forums and hospital parent networks to alleviate a sense of isolation, while acknowledging the strain of balancing treatment, postpartum recovery, and work.

Salinas, for her part, reported that she has been unable to tolerate sunlight for more than twenty days, with constant tearing and a daily deterioration of her eyesight forcing her to live largely at night. Her family issued a statement confirming the presence of two ocular tumours and noting that biopsies are required to determine their nature and guide treatment. The family explicitly requested help locating specialists in ophthalmology and ocular oncology, naming the Hospital Santa Lucía in Buenos Aires as a preferred centre. Viewed from Buenos Aires, the case underscores the challenges of navigating a fragmented specialist referral system even for public figures.

The next factual milestones are the biopsy results for Salinas, which will define the treatment pathway and prognosis for her vision, and the ongoing chemotherapy regimen for Smith’s daughter, the type and stage of which remain private. Both families have framed their public statements as efforts to connect with others facing similar diagnoses, transforming personal trauma into a resource for community support while they await further medical clarity.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

38%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressLatin American press
Sub-Saharan African press/ South African
PragmatismDetachment

A South African influencer has publicly shared her two-year-old daughter's cancer diagnosis, breaking the usual silence around childhood illness. She calmly recounted the moment she noticed something suspicious and the subsequent hospital visit. The story is framed as part of a growing movement to use social platforms for open discussion of serious health issues.

Latin American press/ Market
AlarmUrgency

An Argentine influencer devastated her followers by revealing she has two ocular tumors that threaten her eyesight. In an anguished message, she urgently appealed for help finding specialized ophthalmologists and oncologists. The case highlights the vulnerability of public figures facing sudden health crises and the race against time to preserve vision.

Broaden your view

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Upd. 07:13 AM3 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousScience & HealthNext
6 outlets|3 languages|2 min read
Thursday, July 2, 2026

Influencers on Two Continents Reveal Cancer Diagnoses, Turning to Social Media for Support

Public disclosures by Nara Smith in South Africa and Jazmín La Cuerpo in Argentina highlight how content creators are using their platforms to seek medical advice and share the burden of serious illness.

Two social media personalities with large followings on separate continents have disclosed serious cancer diagnoses within their immediate families, shifting their online presence from lifestyle content to personal health crises. South African model and cookbook author Nara Smith revealed that her two-year-old daughter, Whimsy Lou, was diagnosed with an unspecified cancer late last year and has begun chemotherapy. In Argentina, influencer Jazmín Salinas, known as La Cuerpo, announced that she has two tumours in both eyeballs, a condition she says is rapidly compromising her vision. Both disclosures, made via Instagram, have drawn an outpouring of public sympathy and, in Salinas’s case, a direct appeal for specialist referrals.

Smith described noticing “something suspicious” on her daughter and taking her to an emergency room, where initial assessments were inconclusive. A paediatrician’s quiet demeanour during a follow-up visit prompted what she called a mother’s intuition that the child had cancer. Subsequent biopsies at a children’s hospital confirmed the disease had spread, and doctors ordered immediate chemotherapy. Smith, who has four children including a newborn, said she has turned to online forums and hospital parent networks to alleviate a sense of isolation, while acknowledging the strain of balancing treatment, postpartum recovery, and work.

Salinas, for her part, reported that she has been unable to tolerate sunlight for more than twenty days, with constant tearing and a daily deterioration of her eyesight forcing her to live largely at night. Her family issued a statement confirming the presence of two ocular tumours and noting that biopsies are required to determine their nature and guide treatment. The family explicitly requested help locating specialists in ophthalmology and ocular oncology, naming the Hospital Santa Lucía in Buenos Aires as a preferred centre. Viewed from Buenos Aires, the case underscores the challenges of navigating a fragmented specialist referral system even for public figures.

The next factual milestones are the biopsy results for Salinas, which will define the treatment pathway and prognosis for her vision, and the ongoing chemotherapy regimen for Smith’s daughter, the type and stage of which remain private. Both families have framed their public statements as efforts to connect with others facing similar diagnoses, transforming personal trauma into a resource for community support while they await further medical clarity.

Source divergence

Science & Health · 6 outlets · 3 languages

38%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral25%
Critical75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Sub-Saharan African pressLatin American press
Sub-Saharan African press/ South African
PragmatismDetachment

A South African influencer has publicly shared her two-year-old daughter's cancer diagnosis, breaking the usual silence around childhood illness. She calmly recounted the moment she noticed something suspicious and the subsequent hospital visit. The story is framed as part of a growing movement to use social platforms for open discussion of serious health issues.

Latin American press/ Market
AlarmUrgency

An Argentine influencer devastated her followers by revealing she has two ocular tumors that threaten her eyesight. In an anguished message, she urgently appealed for help finding specialized ophthalmologists and oncologists. The case highlights the vulnerability of public figures facing sudden health crises and the race against time to preserve vision.

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 3 languages

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