Coping with Cancer - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

Coping with Cancer

Description:

All patients with cancer are depressed/anxious and need help. ... Recently diagnosed with Colon cancer. Tx- surgery, 6 rounds of chemo, possible radiation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1735
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: lisab9
Category:
Tags: cancer | colon | coping

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Coping with Cancer


1
Coping with Cancer
  • Dr. Lisa Bialy, PsyD
  • drbialy_at_yahoo.com
  • 415-948-8823
  • Survivors Day 2008

2
This is your brain on cancer.
3
Fight or Flight Response/Survival
  • Normal response to survival situation.
  • Overuse causes damage.
  • Lowered immune functioning, higher burnout, more
    stress.

4
The 6 Feared Ds
  • 1) Discomfort
  • 2) Dependency
  • 3) Disfigurement
  • 4) Disability
  • 5) Disruption
  • 6) Disengagement
  • 7) Death
  • (Holland et al, 2001)

5
Doing the Right Thing
  • Treatment choices.
  • Personality changes
  • Is this making me sicker?

6
You are already coping
7
Understanding Coping Styles
  • Distancing/Denial
  • Accepting
  • Escape-Avoidance
  • Problem Solving
  • Confronting
  • Self-controlling
  • Seeking social support

8
Substance Abuse
  • Avoidant response
  • Exacerbated by illness
  • Loss of control
  • Fear of pain, tx, outcomes
  • Interferes with tx

9
Coping Skills and QOL
  • Thought stopping
  • Affect regulation
  • Exercise, diet
  • Relaxation
  • Emotion expression
  • Humor
  • Distraction
  • Information

10
4 Phases of Treatment
  • Diagnosis
  • Active Treatment
  • Follow-Up
  • Future and Possible Recurrance

11
Myths about Depression/Anxiety
  • All patients with cancer are depressed/anxious
    and need help.
  • Patients with cancer manage well and very few
    need help coping.
  • Talking about depression/anxiety makes matters
    worse.

12
Prevalence of Depression
  • About 47 cancer patients experience depression
    at some point during their illness (Derogatis et
    al, 1983).
  • Of these, most fit criteria for Adjustment
    Disorder, smaller number for Major Depressive
    Disorder.
  • 90 of above secondary to disease or tx.

13
Why do people get depressed?
  • Physical compromises.
  • Life changing event.
  • Stress of decision making.
  • Fear of future.
  • Pain, loss of freedom, changes in lifestyle.
  • Medication Interactions.
  • Thoughts of death.

14
Treatment for Depression/Anxiety
  • Psychotherapy
  • Social Support
  • Medication
  • Psycho-education and coping skills

15
How does psychotherapy work?
  • Normalizes negative feelings.
  • Facilitates communication.
  • Supports fears and hopes.
  • Reinforces existing coping skills.
  • Develops new coping skills.
  • Focuses on Quality of Life
  • Individual, Couples, or Families

16
What is meaningful helps.
  • Support and love from family and friends.
  • Finding personal meaning, creating rituals.
  • Hobbies, activities, beliefs, reflection.

17
Grief Work
  • Normal response to loss, whether from death of a
    beloved, loss, or injury.
  • Usually proportionate to disruption caused by
    loss.
  • Loss is normal part of life for everyone.

18
Stages of Grief
  • Denial/Shock
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression/Sadness
  • Acceptance
  • (On Death and Dying Kubler Ross)

19
Recognizing Grief
  • Insomnia
  • Appetite changes
  • Aimlessness
  • Hopelessness
  • Excessive guilt
  • Psychomotor retardation

20
Specific Psychosocial Interventions
  • Targeted Approaches/Solutions

21
Relaxation Training
  • Breathing
  • Meditation
  • Hypnosis
  • Music
  • Exercise
  • Guided Imagery

22
Sleep Disturbance
  • 48 prescribed medications for cancer patients
    are hypnotics (sleep aids).
  • 44 psychotropics sleep aids.

23
Sexual Dysfunction
  • Medication side effects
  • Treatment side effects
  • Depression
  • Fear of intimacy
  • Couples Therapy

24
Communication with Medical Professionals
  • List of questions and concerns.
  • Education
  • Collaboration/ coordination of care by point
    person.

25
Caregiver Burnout
  • Empathic effort takes its toll
  • Express negative or exhausting feelings
  • Self-care essential
  • Support for caregivers
  • Re-focus on what is important in own lives

26
Group Interventions
  • Benefits social support, communication skills,
    coping responses, and immune functioning.
  • Feedback from other patients and caregivers.
  • Mixed diagnosis/prognosis?

27
Case Presentation
  • Multi-method Interdisciplinary
  • Treatment of Cancer

28
Couple Dealing with Cancer
  • 40 y/o male, w/kids, engaged to be married
  • Recently diagnosed with Colon cancer
  • Tx- surgery, 6 rounds of chemo, possible
    radiation

29
Woman with Breast Cancer
  • 55 y/o married Chinese American woman, w/ 2 kids.
  • Communication struggles w/ family and doctors.
  • Cultural Considerations.

30
Palliative Care
  • 70 y/o Type A male with metastatic cancer.
  • Wife, 2 kids and 3 grandchildren.
  • End of life decisions.
  • Meaning making.
  • Saying goodbye.

31
Summary
  • Advances in cancer dx and tx promising but
    treatment decisions increasingly complex.
  • Coping responses inherent.
  • Depression and anxiety common.
  • Social support essential.
  • Self-care facilitates caregiving.

32
References
  • 1.Jensen AB Psychological factors in breast
    cancer and their possible impact upon prognosis.
    Cancer Treat Rev 1991 18191?210Medline2.Maunse
    ll E, Jacques B, Duschene L Social support and
    survival among women with breast cancer.
    Presented at the Annual Psycho-Oncology Meeting,
    Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York,
    NY, October 19933.Dean C, Surtees PG Do
    psychological factors predict survival in breast
    cancer? Journal of Psychosocial Research 1989
    33561?5694.Forsen A Psychosocial stress as a
    risk for breast cancer. Psychother Psychosom
    1991 55175-185Medline5.Derogatis LR, Abeloff
    MD, Melisartos N Psychological coping mechanism
    and survival time in metastatic breast cancer.
    JAMA 1979 2421504?15086.Greer S, Morris J,
    Pettingage KW Psychological response to breast
    cancer effect on outcome. Lancet 1979
    2785?787Medline7.Greer S Psychological
    response to cancer and survival. Psychol Med
    1991 2143?49Medline8.Spiegel D, Kato P
    Psychosocial influences on cancer incidence and
    progression. Harvard Review of Psychiatry 1996
    May/June, pp 10?269.Hill D, Kelleher K, Shamaker
    SA Psychosocial interventions in adult patients
    with coronary heart disease and cancer a
    literature review. Gen Hosp Psychiatry 1992
    14(6, suppl)285?42510.Spiegel D, Bloom JR,
    Kraemer HC, et al Effect of psychosocial
    treatment on survival of patients with metastatic
    breast cancer. Lancet 1989 2888?901Medline11.R
    ichardson JL, Shelton DR, Kasilo M, et al The
    effect of compliance with treatment on survival
    among patients with hematological malignancies. J
    Clin Oncol 1990 8356?364Abstract12.Fawzy FI,
    Fawzy NW, Hyun CS, et al Malignant melanoma
    effects of an early structured psychiatric
    intervention, coping, and effective state on
    recurrence and survival, 6 years later. Arch Gen
    Psychiatry 1993 50681?689Abstract13.Straker
    M A review of short-term psychotherapy. Diseases
    of the Nervous System 1977 38813?816Medline14.
    Caplan G Principles of Preventative

33
References
  • Psychiatry. New York, Basic Books,
    196415.Lindemann E Symptomatology and management
    of acute grief. Am J Psychiatry 1944
    101141?148Free?Full?Text16.Schmale A
    Principles of psychosocial oncology, in Clinical
    Oncology For Medical Students and Physicians A
    Multidisciplinary Approach, 4th edition.
    Rochester, NY, University of Rochester School of
    Medicine and Dentistry/American Cancer Society,
    1974, pp 109?11817.Straker N, Wyszynski A Denial
    in the cancer patient a common sense approach.
    Internal Medicine for the Specialist 1986
    7(3)150?15518.Leshan L, Leshan E Psychotherapy
    and the patient with a limited lifespan.
    Psychiatry 1961 24318?323Medline19.Wise TN,
    Berlin RM Burnout stresses in consultation.
    Psychosomatics 1981 22744?751Abstract/Free?Full
    ?Text20.Holland J Psychological management of
    cancer patients and their families. Practical
    Psychology 1977 October, pp 14?2021.Kohut H The
    Analysis of the Self. New York, International
    Universities Press, 197122.Norton J Treatment of
    a dying patient. Psychoanal Study Child 1963
    18541?560Medline23.Deutsch F Euthanasia a
    clinical study. Psychoanal Q 1933
    347?36824.Eissler K The Psychiatrist and the
    Dying Patient. New York, International
    Universities Press, 195525.Cassem NH The dying
    patient, in Massachusetts General Hospital
    Handbook of General Hospital Psychiatry, edited
    by Hackett T, Cassem N. St Louis, MO, CV Mosby,
    1978, pp 579?606
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com