Cancer Survivors Say Chemo Fears Unnecessary
Although most cancer survivors polled in a recent survey
said they had been fearful of undergoing chemotherapy, most also said the
treatments were much less trying than they had expected.
In fact, 94 percent said they would advise others to
undergo chemotherapy if their physician recommends it.
"Like most people, I was filled with fears about
chemotherapy, particularly about the possible side effects," says award-winning
broadcast journalist and author Linda Ellerbee, 63, who underwent a double
mastectomy and chemotherapy after being diagnosed with breast cancer 16 years
ago.
"It wasn't fun - no one will tell you that chemotherapy is
fun,” says Ellerbee. “But it wasn't as bad as I expected, either. The reality is
that I believe that I am here today, partly because that treatment worked."
Ellerbee, for decades a renowned journalist at CBS, NBC,
and then PBS, is also the author of a number of books for both children and
adults. The mother of two, she now writes and hosts Nick News for Nickelodeon.
The survey - which polled 326 US adults who had undergone
cancer chemotherapy within the past five years - was sponsored by the nonprofit
National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship (NCCS)
and drug maker Sanofi-Aventis, who together have created the Surviving With
Confidence campaign to help patients gain a better understanding of cancer care.
The survey had several findings./p>
Around eight out of 10 cancer survivors said they had been
fearful prior to starting chemotherapy, with most (76 percent) worried primarily
about side effects such as hair loss, nausea, and fatigue.
Looking back, almost two-thirds (62 percent) said those
fears were unjustified. Just 14 percent described their side effects as "very
difficult," and about a third (32 percent) had a "somewhat easy" or "very easy"
experience with treatment.
Almost all (87 percent) of survivors said that new
supportive care products made the side effects that they did experience much
more manageable than they had expected.
Eighty-seven percent of survivors who had experienced side
effects said that chemotherapy was worth going through, and 90 percent said the
treatments had given them real hope for survival.
Anne Willis, 25, is NCCS'
director of survivorship programs and a 10-year survivor of Ewing's sarcoma, a
rare malignancy that attacks the bone or soft tissue.
She says that when she first knew she would be undergoing
chemotherapy, she "was too scared to ask the nurses what to expect. I never had
any conversations with anybody, so I was absolutely terrified."
But, like many of those polled in the survey, Willis says
she soon realized that her fears of chemotherapy were exaggerated. Her attitudes
toward her health-care team changed, too.
"I became much more of an active participant in my care,"
says Willis. "I never hesitated if I had a problem. One time I had a full-body
rash that did not make me very popular, and I immediately told my doctor about
it. We treated it and took care of the problem."
Too often, patients remain mum about their fears and the
side effects that they do experience. Ellerbee says she was lucky, because her
training as a journalist had taught her to ask questions.
"If you are living with cancer, talk to your doctors and
other health professionals about these issues," she advises. "If you've got
fears, tell them. If you have questions, ask them. Side effects - tell them. Ask
what they can do to help you."
The NCCS strongly advises
that patients also get written "Treatment Plans" from their healthcare team
before they begin chemotherapy. A treatment plan is a document that outlines the
interventions they will receive, potential side effects, and ways to manage
those side effects.
"I know personally that having that piece of paper would
have encouraged me to open up that dialogue with my health-care team," says
Willis.
Everyone agrees that, if anything, cancer care has gotten
both easier and more effective in the decade or more since Willis and Ellerbee
received their care.
"Things are dramatically different now in the 10 or 12
years since [Willis'] treatment, in terms of what we can do for patients to
improve their care," says oncologist Dr. Howard Burris, at the Sarah Cannon
Research Institute in Nashville, Tenn. "It's really made cancer care an
outpatient business."
Ellerbee agrees. "Since my diagnosis, there have been many
advances in cancer care, and more people survive every year because of new
treatment options," she says. "In other words, it is more possible today to live
life as you know it - and to have that life as you know it go on - while you are
undergoing therapies that can potentially extend your life or save your life."
"It has been 16 years since I was diagnosed with cancer,"
Ellerbee adds, "and every morning that I wake up on the right side of the grass,
I am a grateful woman, because I did not let my fears keep me from getting the
treatment that I needed."
Always consult your physician for more information.