Do Survivors Need a Dietitian?
Nutrition after cancer becomes part of an emerging
survivorship
plan.
By Elizabeth Whittington
When Diana Dyer, a three-time cancer survivor and
registered dietitian, completed treatment for her first
bout with breast cancer in 1985, she asked her oncologist
what she could do for herself, asking specifically
about diet. “The lack of a clear answer was frustrating
and disappointing.”
Interest and research over the next 20 years created a better understanding of
the role of nutrition for healthy cancer survivorship, but for many survivors,
interpreting the multitude of data published on the subject can be tricky. Registered
dietitians can help explain the research, review a survivor’s medical history,
communicate with the survivor’s healthcare team and pull all that information
together to create short-term and long-term nutrition goals.
What to Expect
One of the responsibilities of a registered dietitian
is to develop a nutrition plan that will not only
improve cancer-related health, but also other chronic
illnesses, such as hypertension and diabetes. “It
can be a time to optimize overall health, not just
focus on the chance to reduce the risk of recurrence,” Dyer
says.
Immediately following treatment, many survivors should
focus on short-term goals, such as returning to their
normal weight. “This is the time to regain the
strength to grocery shop and cook your own meals, not
the time to worry about eating nine or more servings
of fruits and vegetables a day,” Dyer says. Long-term
goals that include weight loss or maintenance, increasing
fruits and vegetables and better overall nutrition
allow survivors to work on these goals over several
months and even years.
Rachel Zinaman, a registered dietitian at the Evelyn
Lauder Breast Center at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York, says personal interests and where
patients are in their survivorship will determine what
can be accomplished with a dietitian. She advises patients
to make a list of questions before the initial appointment
and know what they hope to accomplish by using a dietitian.
Patients should also bring their complete medical history
and a list of any medications, supplements, vitamins
or herbs they take. “If they want a dietitian
to help manage drug-nutrient interaction, we can help
them with that,” Zinaman says. “We’ll
see patients come in with shopping bags of bottles
asking us to go through them and tell them what they
shouldn’t take.”
How to Find a Dietitian
Although many professionals use the
titles interchangeably, not every nutritionist is trained as a registered
dietitian. The first place to look for a registered dietitian is
at a cancer center. The American Dietetic Association also has a
listing of registered dietitians at www.eatright.org.
Finding a dietitian also means paying for his or her
services. Medicare only covers nutritional services
for renal disease and diabetes, and a legislative bill
proposed in 2005 to expand these services to cancer
failed to pass. “We believe diseases such as
cancer can be related to weight, and a healthy lifestyle
can reduce that risk. We want these services to be
covered,” Zinaman says. Survivors should ask
about insurance and payment issues when finding a dietitian.
Though many large cancer centers, such as Sloan-Kettering,
include nutritional help in their care, sessions can
be expensive if not covered by insurance.
Dietitians can work with patients during one session
and answer questions on healthy guidelines and what’s
recommended for a certain cancer, though issues such
as weight management may require several sessions.
As follow-up care expands to include more holistic
elements, such as nutrition, dietitians are taking
their place on the survivor’s healthcare team. “A
lot of people enjoy the supportive environment and
motivational learning dietitians provide,” Zinaman
says. “You have a counselor that you work with
one on one instead of an annual checkup, and actually
form a relationship with your dietitian.” |