There is no way to answer this question without knowing your dose. You presumably are wearing a dosimetry badge, and you should be getting monthly reports of your integrated dose. Unless you give us this number, we can't tell you anything useful. If this 2.8 uCi source has been in your pocket 24 hours a day for 3 months, that's one dose. If you've been working a meter away from it for a few hours a day for 3 months, that's a whole different dose.
Let's assume that your dose for this summer has been less than 1000 uSv. In that case, we may be able to answer two logically distinct questions: (1) has it made your cancer risk higher? (2) if so, then how much increased risk have you experienced?
Nobody knows the answer to #1. There is a variety of evidence that there is a general effect called radiation hormesis, in which an organism's health *improves* due to exposure to small doses of radiation. We don't know if this effect applies to humans, because we can't do controlled experiments with humans. If it does, then the answer to #1 is no. Your risk has not increased, it has decreased.
The answer to #2 is that any increase or decrease is too small to worry about. It is much less than the incremental risk you would get by living in Colorado for a year.
The more general question is what methods you're using to judge the reliability of your sources of information. Why should you trust me, a random person on the internet, more or less than your employer? This is an issue on which many otherwise intelligent people have amazingly stupid ill-informed opinions, and if you ask enough of them, they will be happy to share those opinions with you.