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‘If it almost kills you that means it’s working!’ : cultural models of chemotherapy expressed in a cancer support group Bell, Kirsten
Abstract
It has long been recognised that cancer is an extraordinarily culturally charged disease. However, while studies have provided valuable insights into the embodied experience of cancer, far less research exists on cancer patients’ and survivors’ perceptions of the treatments they receive and the meanings they assign to these treatments. This paper focuses specifically on chemotherapy – a highly feared form of treatment that is often popularly depicted to be worse than the experience of cancer itself. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork at a cancer support group in western Canada, this article explores patient perceptions of adjuvant chemotherapy. I argue that a widespread cultural model of chemotherapy exists which emphasises the value of suffering as a means of tracking treatment effectiveness and the possibility of cure. However, while highly coherent, this model diverges from biomedical understandings of treatment in important respects, with implications for patient anxiety levels during treatment and their subjective assessments of the future risk of recurrence. Overall, research findings highlight the need to pay closer attention to the meanings patients assign to cancer treatments and call for further research in this area.
Item Metadata
Title |
‘If it almost kills you that means it’s working!’ : cultural models of chemotherapy expressed in a cancer support group
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Creator | |
Publisher |
Elsevier
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Date Issued |
2009
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Description |
It has long been recognised that cancer is an extraordinarily culturally charged disease. However, while studies have provided valuable insights into the embodied experience of cancer, far less research exists on cancer patients’ and survivors’ perceptions of the treatments they receive and the meanings they assign to these treatments. This paper focuses specifically on chemotherapy – a highly feared form of treatment that is often popularly depicted to be worse than the experience of cancer itself. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork at a cancer support group in western Canada, this article explores patient perceptions of adjuvant chemotherapy. I argue that a widespread cultural model of chemotherapy exists which emphasises the value of suffering as a means of tracking treatment effectiveness and the possibility of cure. However, while highly coherent, this model diverges from biomedical understandings of treatment in important respects, with implications for patient anxiety levels during treatment and their subjective assessments of the future risk of recurrence. Overall, research findings highlight the need to pay closer attention to the meanings patients assign to cancer treatments and call for further research in this area.
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Subject | |
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Type | |
Language |
eng
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Date Available |
2016-01-06
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0223107
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URI | |
Affiliation | |
Citation |
Social Science and Medicine, 68 (1), 169-176.
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Peer Review Status |
Reviewed
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Scholarly Level |
Faculty
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Rights URI | |
Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada