Literature DB >> 23448954

No one sees the fear: becoming diseased before becoming ill--being diagnosed with breast cancer.

Christine Holmberg1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Breast cancer patients experience profound life changes that include feelings of fear years after concluding treatment.
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this article was to understand the nature and origin of the persistent worry women experience after breast cancer treatment.
METHODS: Materials from participant observation of an oncology ward and from interviews with 17 first-time breast cancer patients, 4 oncologists, and 10 nurses were analyzed. Interpretation of materials was guided by theoretical concepts such as embodiment and liminality to understand the phenomenological aspects and cultural shaping of the illness experience.
RESULTS: Interviewees felt healthy at the time of diagnosis. It was the physician's word that initiated the illness process through the experience of shock. Nurses' work and therapeutic emplotment were instrumental in guiding the women to overcome the shock and engage in treatment. Study participants' lives were restructured under biomedical conditions. This included mistrust toward their bodies. Because of the mode of diagnosis and the initial shock, long-term fear can be seen as an integral part of the experience of having had breast cancer.
CONCLUSIONS: The study participants' sense of being in the world had changed in that their bodies had become objects unto themselves, dangerous objects. Fear became part of women's lives. To control the fear, women relied on biomedical practices to interpret bodily sensations. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Therapeutic interventions and practices of care that facilitate a reconnection of trust with the (physical) body should be included in the care of posttreatment patients.

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Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 23448954     DOI: 10.1097/NCC.0b013e318281395e

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Nurs        ISSN: 0162-220X            Impact factor:   2.592


  4 in total

1.  Experiencing Cancer. An Ethnographic Study on Illness and Disease.

Authors:  Christine Holmberg
Journal:  Recent Results Cancer Res       Date:  2021

2.  Understanding the role of health information in patients' experiences: secondary analysis of qualitative narrative interviews with people diagnosed with cancer in Germany.

Authors:  Susanne Blödt; Maleen Kaiser; Yvonne Adam; Sandra Adami; Martin Schultze; Jacqueline Müller-Nordhorn; Christine Holmberg
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-03-12       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  'You're kind of left to your own devices': a qualitative focus group study of patients with breast, prostate or blood cancer at a hospital in the South West of England, exploring their engagement with exercise and physical activity during cancer treatment and in the months following standard care.

Authors:  Sian Karen Smith; Gareth Wiltshire; Frankie F Brown; Haryana Dhillon; Mike Osborn; Sarah Wexler; Mark Beresford; Mark A Tooley; James E Turner
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Exploring women's experiences participating in yoga after a cancer diagnosis: a protocol for a meta-synthesis.

Authors:  Jenson Price; Jennifer Brunet
Journal:  Syst Rev       Date:  2022-08-12
  4 in total

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