Philippa Matheson had a spot on her head which turned out to be cancerous. Photo / Supplied
"Jesus, Philippa", broadcaster Chris Lynch said to his childhood friend as they prepared to re-enact a photo first taken when they were toddlers.
"What's that bloody thing on your face? You need to get that thing checked. It looks a bit off".
That thing turned out to be skin cancer. And straight-talking Lynch, a Newstalk ZB host, might've saved his friend's life.
"I was in a bolshy mood," he said of the day this summer when he and his friend, Brisbane-based school counsellor Philippa Matheson, met to re-enact the photo at Matheson's childhood home in Christchurch.
"I said to her, 'That thing on your face looks like a cancer'."
Matheson told the Herald she'd seen her doctor about the spot, which looked like a small scab with odd shading around it, a few months earlier. She was given a cream and told to come back if it didn't clear the spot up.
The spot remained, but the 37-year-old didn't return to her doctor.
"I have three kids so I hadn't got around to going back."
Matheson told Lynch the spot was "all good", but he was so worried he sent a photo to his dermatologist friend Dr Ken Macdonald, Lynch said.
"He said it was some kind of dodgy cancerous thing, I can't remember the name, and that when she goes back to Australia to get it cut out."
The spot turned out to be skin cancer, but it was discovered early enough that once it was cut out Matheson was in the clear.
She was grateful her friend - whom she'd known all her life after their mothers met during long weeks staying in hospital after both gave birth prematurely - had chosen to speak up.
"He was gutsy enough to say something and he was very serious and firm about it."
Macdonald, speaking on Lynch's Newstalk ZB show today, said the main message was to "get in early" if you're concerned.
"If it has just come up as a scab then obviously everybody gets these all time, and so you give things a little time and see if they settle down. But if there are features ... abnormal pigment or colour, or a collection of blood vessels which are unusual, then it's better to have it looked at.
"Most skin cancers, including melanoma, are diagnosed early and that's really what all the publicity is about - get in early and have someone look at [it] who can make a diagnosis."