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Robin Roberts
The Associated Press -- Aug 25, 2007 --

"Good Morning America" co-host Robin Roberts said Thursday she is currently in the "halftime" part of her treatment for breast cancer.

"The cancer is out of my body and I'm healing from the surgery. I am feeling better than I have," Roberts told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Thursday. "Hopefully, the plan now is to keep it out."

The 46-year-old Mississippi Gulf Coast native announced on ABC's morning television show July 31 that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. She underwent surgery on Aug. 3.

The former college basketball player said now she is "talking with different doctors" about her treatment. She said doctors will wait several weeks for her to heal before having her undergo more treatment, which may mean chemotherapy.

Roberts said she did not want to be specific about her treatment until she is certain what it will be.

"The prognosis is quite good," she said. "I did find it in the early stages. I am very confident and they (doctors) are very confident that it is going to be fine. The road getting there is going to be a little bumpier than I anticipated and they anticipated. I am better off than so many people who find it so late and that is why I am grateful and that again is why my battle cry is early detection."

Roberts, who grew up in Pass Christian, Miss., said she did take some heat for returning to work less than two weeks after her surgery.

"My mother was fussing at me for coming back in 10 days," she said.

She added that not every person who undergoes the surgery can make the decision to return that quickly to work.

"When it comes to cancer it is personal. It's not one size fits all. You have to do what is right for you," she said.

Roberts said it was important for her to get back as "quickly as possible" because she didn't know how much she would be able to work in the coming months.

"I know I will work," Roberts said.

Since being diagnosed with the disease, Roberts said it felt like her life was moving at "90 mph." After the surgery, the former sportscaster described the weeks between the next step in treatment as "halftime."

Roberts is scheduled to speak Wednesday at an event for The Pink Heart Funds, a nonprofit organization that provides wigs and breast prostheses to women suffering from breast cancer who have financial hardships. Before being diagnosed with breast cancer, Roberts signed up to speak at the group's fund raising event.

"I am a firm believer that everything happens for a reason," she said. "I kind of looked at the heavens and said 'did you know something up there that I didn't know that led me to say 'yes' to this?"'

(Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)