Learn more about chemotherapy patients
The disease of the 20th century as it is often called, cancer has not been given a viable solution or treatment not even now in the 21st century. Highly powerful medication remains the main way to deal with the disease which is why chemotherapy patients have to be informed on the necessity and the specificity of the cancer treatments.
Whether surgery is used or not, cancer chemotherapy represents the most trodden path in the approach to cancer. Chemotherapy patients usually have to deal with overwhelming physical and psychological stress. One's morale can easily break down because of the physical sufferance chemotherapy brings. Self-esteem can hardly be maintained when facing extreme adverse reactions, since they may include alopecia, constant nausea and dizziness, pains and infections of all sorts depending on the part of the body that is affected or on the type of medication that has been prescribed to follow. Some chemotherapy patients think that they lose the grip of who they are since many basic or favorite activities cannot be conducted as before.
Another level of impact on chemotherapy patients is the psychological one. They need to receive the moral needed support from their family and friends and the trouble is that many choose not to share this burden with their loved ones. Because of this, they will most likely lack in support and will have to carry this burden by themselves. Not being able to talk about it as they would, not being able to share will make them feel marginalized, separated from the people in their lives and will break their morale.
On the other hand, there are other chemotherapy patients that do share their sufferance with their family, but in time, they see themselves as burdens and feel responsible for the trouble they cause, thus adding a sense of guilt to their already precarious psychological balance. Self-isolation will often be chosen as an option in such cases, but specialists indicate that it is wrong and detrimental to one's well being to refuse support and face cancer alone.
All these considered, it is highly obvious that family and friends of chemotherapy patients should get informed about what their beloved ones are going through and about how help can be provided in such situations. The moral strength of chemotherapy patients can be kept above surface level or increased only by psychologists and people who honestly display affection and interest in helping.
Article Source: HealthSnare.com
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Dr. Bill Ackart
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Date: Tue, 21 Apr 2009 Time: 11:05 AM
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