JASON COLLINS FLEW 9,000 MILES TO A COUNTRY WHERE HIS TREATMENT WASN’T ILLEGAL. IN AMERICA, IT WAS. When doctors told Jason Collins he had Stage 4 glioblastoma — the deadliest form of brain cancer — he did something most people wouldn’t expect from a retired NBA player. He got on a plane to Singapore. Not for vacation. Not for business. For an experimental treatment that American hospitals couldn’t legally offer him. And here’s the thing… it worked. At least for a while. Collins came back strong enough to attend NBA All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles. He walked into his alma mater Stanford to watch a game. People saw him smiling. People thought maybe, just maybe, he’d beaten it. “Jason changed lives in unexpected ways and was an inspiration to all who knew him and to those who admired him from afar,” his family later said. But glioblastoma doesn’t negotiate. The cancer returned. And on May 12, 2026, Jason died peacefully at his Los Angeles home. He was 47. What most people still don’t realize — the treatment that gave Jason those final good months, those last smiles at All-Star Weekend, those goodbye hugs at Stanford… American patients still can’t access it today. A man who broke barriers his entire life spent his final chapter fighting one that medicine itself hasn’t broken yet.
Jason Collins Flew 9,000 Miles for a Treatment He Could Not Get in America When Jason Collins was told he…