Pain Management and Cancer Care - The Importance of Easing the Hurt
If you asked someone who has never fought cancer what the chief challenges of cancer treatment are, you’d probably hear things like “cancer patients often lose their hair,” and “chemo can make you really nauseous and you don’t want to eat anything.” And of course, in many cases, these observations are right on.
But if you asked a cancer survivor what else they had to deal with while undergoing their treatments, you might also hear “cancer hurts!”
I admit that I didn’t really realize how much pain is often part of a cancer diagnosis, but after speaking with my cancer survivor friends and family members and doing a lot of reading on the subject, it really makes a lot of sense. In some cases the tumor is pushing on nerves or organs or another body part and it can be really uncomfortable to live with. Or when cancer metastasizes and spreads to other areas of the body, it can lead to a lot of pain. And then in other cases people have surgery to remove the cancerous growth, which of course can cause pain during recovery.
And pain from cancer can also have psychological factors too. Having cancer is extremely stressful and can lead to incredible amounts of tension in the body, insomnia, and anxiety.
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