A Day-to-Day Guide for
Breast Cancer Patients
After diagnosis
it’s easy to focus on all the negative things and the long road ahead. You may
fear the treatment and its side effects. This is all common; remember you
aren’t the only one experiencing these same symptoms. It’s important to note
these symptoms are a major focus of your healthcare team and are incorporated
in your overall treatment plan.
Living with cancer not dying from it.
Tips to Reduce Stress:
·
Open up
to your oncologist
·
Find
out all your treatment options offered in your treatment plan
·
Talk
about side effects
·
Stay
organized
·
Keep
positive attitude
·
Relax
·
Exercise
·
Eat a well-balanced
diet
·
Rest
and sleep
Give yourself time and be patient. Adjust. After your operation, swelling will
go down, bruising will fade, and scars will gradually become less obvious.
Scars will take a little longer to fade, but they will. Find out as much as you
can about your personal condition. Communicate with other people that are in
the same situation and make some time for your self each day. Stay up to date on how your cancer is
responding to the treatment.
You are not Alone. About 1 in 8 U.S. women (about 12%)
will develop invasive breast cancer over the course of her lifetime. In 2014,
there were more than 2.8 million women with a history of breast cancer in the
U.S. This includes women currently being treated and women who have finished
treatment.
Questions To Ask Your Doctors:
1. How long will it take for me to get
back to normal life?
- Is there any counseling available to help me with the emotional side of breast cancer?
- Are there medicines to help reduce menopausal symptoms, such as hot flashes?
- Will the medicine cause side effects?
- Is there any practical help I can get?
- How can I reduce tiredness?
- Would complementary therapies help me to cope with depression, tiredness or anxiety?
- Is there anyone who can help
me with financial issues, including claiming benefits? References:1. Living with breast cancer surgery. (n.d.). Retrieved October 24, 2014, from http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/type/breast-cancer/living/living-with-breast-cancer-surgery
No comments:
Post a Comment