Cancer survivorship is a day-to-day, ongoing process that begins with your diagnosis and continues through the rest of your life. Living Beyond Cancer discusses a number of important issues that are specific to life beyond the diagnosis and initial treatment of cancer.
Surviving cancer is more complicated than simply being sick or well, having cancer or being cancerfree. Instead, it is a continual process that is constantly changing. There may be times when the joy you feel about survival far outweighs any anxieties you may have. Then, there will be times when your fears and uncertainties seem to take over your life, and you wonder if you will ever feel normal again.
Hear how acknowledging and sharing your fears can provide a feeling of control and a sense of hopefulness.
Hear many survivors explain their different emotional concerns and how they learned to deal with them.
Allow Linda, a social worker, to give some suggestions in dealing with role transitions and difficulties that occur after treatment within families.
Learn about the necessary steps to take to “get you house in order” and hear how Kathy, a 42-year-old survivor, made sure her family would be okay if something happened to her.
Learn from survivors how to keep track of your health in the months and years after cancer.
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Survivorship statistics are encouraging, but you may be unaware of potential delayed side effects of the illness and its treatment. This is increasingly important as the number of long-term survivors increases. Currently, follow-up clinics exist primarily for survivors of childhood cancer.
Over the past several years the Institute of Medicine has published several reports on the status of survivorship research. These reports include: Childhood Cancer Survivorship: Improving Care and Quality of Life (2003); From Cancer Patient to Cancer Survivor: Lost in Transition (2005); and Cancer Care For the Whole Patient: Meeting Psychosocial Health Needs (2007).
These reports demonstrate that after a diagnosis of cancer there is an increased risk of a recurrence (reappearance of disease) or metastases (transmission to other sites in the body), or of a second primary tumor. There are also other increased risks that vary based on a particular diagnosis and treatment. Since its inception, NCCS has advocated for research and long-term follow-up for adult cancer survivors. As early as 1987, a leading oncologist in survivorship research, Dr. Patricia A. Ganz, wrote:
These suggestions are as true today. There is now evidence that treatment may cause or contribute to longterm or subsequent physiologic changes as long as 5, 10, or 20 plus years later. This is not intended to frighten you, but rather to alert you to the potential problems so that you can be vigilant about your care.
Simply by aging, many of us experience these health problems. Organ damage, organ failure, premature infertility, premature aging, compromised immune system and a damaged endocrine system have been identified as some of the potential immediate, mid-range and long-term effects. These effects may contribute to chronic illness, incontinence, swelling, reproductive problems and psychological conditions.
Leading experts in oncology provide up-to-date information in one-hour workshops over the telephone or online.
Build lists of practical questions used to guide conversations between you and your doctors and nurses.
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