Breaking the News About Breast Cancer
2008-Aug-07
THURSDAY, Aug. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Shelley Volz, now 59, got
the news about her breast cancer diagnosis 10 years ago, right
before she was headed from San Francisco to New York for the
wedding of her younger brother.
After much thought, she decided to tell only her mother before
the wedding and to hold off telling other family members. "My
mother had a typical mother's reaction, tears and hugs, and we
moved on," Volz said. "She really appreciated the fact that I
didn't want to steal the limelight there."
Volz waited until after the wedding celebration to calmly tell
others. Ten years later, after successful treatment, she is doing
fine.
While she says she doesn't think she found it as difficult as
many people to disclose the diagnosis, she did think about others'
reactions.
In that sense, she is typical, according to a new study. "Even
when women are facing a breast cancer diagnosis, they are still
concerned about caring for everyone else, especially the emotions
of others," said study author Grace J. Yoo, a medical sociologist
at San Francisco State University's Biobehavioral Research
Center.
She presented the findings Monday at the American Sociological
Association annual meeting, in Boston. The research is especially
timely, given the recent news that actress Christina Applegate, 36,
is being treated for early breast cancer.
Yoo and her team interviewed 164 San Francisco-area breast
cancer survivors, average age 57, of different ethnicities to
evaluate the "emotion work" involved in telling others about the
diagnosis.
In interviews with the researchers, the women talked about their
feelings and actions after getting the diagnosis.
"Even telling someone, 'I have breast cancer,' it's well thought
out," Yoo said. "They know the statement, to some, can overwhelm."
Women react in different ways -- stifling their own emotions so
they don't appear vulnerable, paying attention to the timing of
their news, or sometimes letting it all out, she said.
>Women find it somewhat easier to tell friends than family
members, she found. "Women are trying to protect older, aging
parents and younger children and even their spouses, even during
illness. Women are socialized to care about others."
Ideally, Yoo said, women should do less of that at this time.
"It's a time they should be caring about themselves, what decisions
they should be making about breast cancer. They shouldn't
emotionally burn themselves out by caring for others'
emotions."
One woman, for instance, told the interviewer that she didn't
tell her mother about her breast cancer until after the surgery,
because she knew her mother would worry. Many women said once they
were told about the diagnosis, they were surprised about the
outpouring of help, even from acquaintances. But some feared that
if they told, people may not care enough to help.
The findings ring true with what another expert has seen in
clinical practice. This has "documented what we have known
instinctively," said Lori Worden, an oncology social worker in
Grants Pass, Ore.
Her advice to women? "You don't need to tell people today." Feel
free to process it yourself first. Practicing what you will say, by
saying it out loud to yourself or writing it down, can help, she
said.
Yoo's advice: "We tell women to seek out other breast cancer
survivors, other women who understand, to increase their
resources." And focus more on getting emotional support than giving
it.
More information
To learn more about how to tell others about your diagnosis,
visit the
Lance Armstrong Foundation.
HealthDay News
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ScoutNews,
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