Unique
programs give gratitude and support
to co-survivors.
By Jennifer Haupt
At first glance, Patricia Newton, 71, and Kim White, 45, don’t
appear to have much in common. But during the past four years,
the two women from Warren, Arkansas, have become as close as mother
and daughter. “Kim was just a casual acquaintance, but when
she heard I was diagnosed with breast cancer she called me right
away, and she’s been there for me every day since,” says
Newton, who discovered during that first phone call that her newfound
friend had a lumpectomy just a month before and was going through
radiation treatment. “My life changed drastically after meeting
Kim. She became so much more than my caregiver—she’s
my best friend, companion and faith teacher. She’s my co-survivor,
my co-everything.”
Though seemingly a simple extension of the caregiver definition,
a new term has entered the cancer vocabulary to define people who
care for cancer patients—co-survivor. “Just as we honor
the lifelong fight of cancer patients by calling them survivors,
we are now also honoring the continuing role of nonmedical caregivers—the
spouse, parent, friend, neighbor, co-worker—anyone who provides
the support that is so critical for recovery, as well as maintaining
emotional and physical well-being of the patient,” says Wendy
Mason, director of project management for the Susan G. Komen Breast
Cancer Foundation, which recently launched a co-survivor program.
"We’ve always provided
a helpline and educational tools for caregivers, but we got to a
point where we wanted to formally put a structure around the co-survivor
program to really legitimize their needs,” says Mason. The
Komen co-survivor program consists of, among other things, a collection
of co-survivor stories that illustrate the program’s key objectives:
strength, support, love. The goal is one easy-access area for co-survivors
to be informed and connect with each other.
Though the term “co-survivor” has been employed
for some time in other settings, the recent extension into oncology has led
cancer centers and
support organizations to diversify support services to provide a broader
foundation for those who are the backbone of strength for cancer
patients.
Caring for Mind, Body and Spirit
Medical advances coupled with
changing health policies mean shorter hospital stays for cancer
patients and more strain on those who
care for them at home. “Ninety
percent of cancer care is delivered in outpatient settings, and caregivers
bear the major responsibility for this home care,” says
Ronda C. Talley, PhD, former executive director of the Rosalynn
Carter Institute for Caregiving. “Caregivers
have major unmet needs—concerns about handling daily life, their emotions
and their sense of social identity. Supporting these needs is an integral
part of overall patient care.”
A growing body of studies
confirms Dr. Talley’s position that support for caregivers
is key throughout the entire process of coping with cancer. A recent
study in the journal Psychooncology reported that husbands
of women with breast cancer had lower quality of life independent
of the time since diagnosis or stage of illness compared with men
with healthy wives.
Experts are finding
that co-survivors need the same integrated approach to wellness as their
partners. “Co-survivors are often so overwhelmed with concern
for the patient that they forget to eat, lose sleep, skip exercise and
generally let their own physical and mental health slide,” says
Mitch Golant, PhD, vice president of research and development for The
Wellness
Community, a non-profit
dedicated to providing support and education for survivors and co-survivors. “Co-survivors
take part in all of our mind, body and spirit classes—whether it’s
counseling groups, nutrition classes or meditation and exercise programs.”
Phyddy
Kettler, a psychiatric advanced practice nurse who runs a weekly support
group for caregivers at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, says caregivers
often
are hesitant to ask for help or feel too guilty taking time for themselves. “But
it is vital that they do so in order to combat physical and mental
fatigue,” she
says. Like many first-rate cancer treatment centers, M.D. Anderson
offers a growing variety of mind-body programs for survivors and co-survivors,
including massage,
nutrition, yoga, Pilates and weekly educational forums presented by
staff
members.
An innovative laughter program used by Gilda’s Club,
the national support program named after Gilda Radner, is being adopted
by an increasing number of
hospitals and cancer centers. “Laughter is one of the best
remedies for the depression and anxiety that can rob both survivors
and co-survivors
of the
energy needed to fight cancer,” says Gloria Nelson, a senior
oncology social worker who runs laughter sessions for cancer survivors
and co-survivors at Albert
Einstein/Montefiore Cancer Center in New York.
Edward Haczynski, a
74-year-old former police officer, and his wife, Phyllis, have
attended Nelson’s laughter sessions since he was diagnosed
with multiple myeloma four years ago. “We’re all taking
a stand that even though we have this horrible disease, we’re
still going to enjoy life and even have a good laugh once in awhile,” says
Haczynski, who often tells Jay Leno jokes. “I think my wife
likes to see me making people laugh. It’s
in my nature and the cancer isn’t going to take that away
from me.”
Building A Village
When it comes to caring for a child with cancer,
it’s important for the
entire family to be on the same page with treatment as well as
making sure that siblings, friends and teachers are clear about
what’s going on with the
young patient. “It’s best to present everyone with
the facts, otherwise the imagination takes over and that can be
worse than reality,” says Carol
Benefield, a counselor at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston,
who runs weekly support groups for parents and siblings of pediatric
cancer patients.
The Child and Life Program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive
Cancer Center even takes its support services directly to the patient’s
school to help teachers and classmates understand how the disease
works and the symptoms.
When children are involved, survivors and
co-survivors especially need to fuel up on laughter, exercise and
other stress-reducing
activities. Family
camp
programs, like the three-day Camp CLIFF at Camp for All in the
Texas Hill Country, take
families away from the demands of fighting cancer.
“When our invitation to the camp came in the mail, my son
was going through a grueling four-month chemo treatment, and I
was driving him an hour to the hospital
every other day,” says Susan LeBlanc, whose 9-year-old son
Andrew was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in June
2004. “Camp was three days of
pure freedom. The moms were in one cabin, the dads were in another,
and the kids were grouped by sex and age, so the support just came
naturally. To see my son
running around bald-headed with a central line running out of his
chest, feeling like a normal little boy at summer camp—that
was the best medicine for all of us.”
Survivors and co-survivors
gain enormous strength in numbers through camps and retreats, patient/caregiver
partnerships, small groups
sharing emotional
support
and practical tips, and growing communities networking through
nationwide conferences and online communities.
When Bobbie Ragan
of California was diagnosed with lung cancer, the 75-year-old couldn’t
always express herself to her husband Rex because she was either
too tired or didn’t quite understand it herself. But for
the past year, she and her husband have attended a support group
for couples. “Going to
a support group together has taken some of the stress off our relationship
because Rex learns from the entire group what I’m going through
and how he can help.” Now, when Bobbie has chemotherapy treatments,
Rex knows to encourage her to nap and fixes meals she can eat even
when she has no appetite.
The safe environment also helped the
couple open up to each other. “Sometimes,
it’s easier to tell your partner something in the supportive
group atmosphere,” Rex
explains. “One time, Bobbie told me, ‘I wish you’d
go to the beach by yourself sometimes,’ and other patients
chuckled and chimed in that they’d like to have more time
away from their spouse. My feelings might have been hurt if she
told me that at home, but it wasn’t as threatening
when I could see that other couples were going through the same
thing.”
Honoring Co-Survivors
Sharing stories is a way for survivors to
honor the people who provide support and inspiration through their
diagnosis and treatment.
Last
year, a number
of local Komen chapters and cancer centers initiated essay contests
for breast cancer
survivors to honor their co-survivors. The Arkansas affiliate of
Komen teamed up with a local television station to feature five
winning survivor/co-survivor
teams on a local talk show in addition to honoring the co-survivors
at a
luncheon following the affiliate’s annual Race for the Cure
event.
Patricia Newton and Kim White were among the winning teams. “I
was so honored to be able to help Pat through her cancer and to
get to know this incredible
woman,” says White. “I had no idea she was writing
this essay about me, so when we were picked, it was an amazing
surprise. Just one more gift I’ve
received from Pat.” Newton and White are known
around the small town of Warren as the “Dynamic Duo.”
When they saw a need for a breast cancer support group, they organized
one. They also published a cookbook entitled Potlucks, Parties,
and Pink Ribbons as a fundraiser and handed over a $16,000
check to both the American Cancer Society and Komen last year.
Georgia-Pacific and its Quilted
Northern Ultra bath tissue brand teamed up with NASCAR’s
Kyle Petty to host a “Time for Thanks” weekend at
Victory Junction Gang Camp in North Carolina last November. Of
the more than 450 essays submitted by survivors honoring their
co-survivors, 32 survivor/co-survivor
teams won a weekend of spa treatments, horseback riding and other
activities.
Terri McClain and her husband Herbert were among the
winners. “During 33 years of marriage, I’ve always been
the one doing most of the cooking and caring for my husband, but
while I was going through months of chemo and recovery, our marriage
did a 180,” says 54-year-old Terri, who was diagnosed with
breast cancer in 2001. “Herbert did whatever I needed him
to do. He went to all of my doctors’ appointments and chemo
treatments. He nursed me through the nausea and drained my tubes.
He held me all night when I was scared. He has been my rock. We’re
both living with cancer and he’s a true survivor.” |