Thursday, July 25, 2013

Overall Societal Change: Families and Cancer

-->
Overall societal change: families and cancer
            Because our society, as well as most other societies is family oriented, the impact of a family member getting, being treated for, or dying from cancer affects not only the immediate family, but also others such as co-workers, friends, healthcare workers, and a list of other people and organizations seemingly unrelated to cancer.  In other words society in general.  Cancer is a pervasive type of disease that can affect anyone at any time and its occurrence can cause a “ripple effect” throughout society.  When an individual gets cancer he or she becomes the focus of attention, but may not actually be the specific person who initiates social/medical changes mentioned in this report.  Often, because of the plight of the patient, family members, friends, physicians, and nurses are the ones who begin to institute new practices and approaches to cancer in response to the patient’s condition. 
For instance, one example of this initiation of change by others is the effort to develop cancer treatments that are less painful and or stressful to the patient by physicians and scientist.  Immunotherapy is such a treatment because in its purest form it does not require the use of chemotherapy to combat the cancer.  Since it makes use of the cancer patient’s own immune system, the side effects of such treatment are minimal.  In the future, it is quite possible that treatments such as these may allow the patient to lead a normal life while being treated (Alexander 2011).  Without having to think too hard about how the development of such a treatment could be given high priority one only has to think of the fact that almost everyone involved in the decision-making process of immunotherapy’s development has or has had a family member treated for cancer with chemotherapy and they have watched them suffer from its toxic side effects.  This is also a demonstration of the “ripple effect” caused by cancer in our society.  The family unit and the members in it are conduits, which funnel emotional responses and in many cases policy and practice-changing ideas out to the larger society.
            Often when the words “family unit” are used the concept that comes to mind is the traditional family: consist of a mother, father, and siblings.  However, most of the family units in our society and others are of the non-traditional type.  The 2000 US Census Bureau figures reveal that less than 14% of American households are of the traditional type (US Census Bureau 2005).  The other households consist of a complex arrangement of individuals consisting of a sustainable family unit.  With this complexity comes a complex response to one member being diagnosed with cancer. 
Even with traditional families, the response varies depending upon which member (mother, father, or sibling) contract the disease.  Each situation brings with it various types of responsibilities and stress in response to the stricken family member.  For instance, breast cancer in a traditional family is very stressful for the other members and can result in long-lasting emotional problems within the family.  Since it can be inherited through the discovery of the BRCA gene, there can be guilt associated with its discovery in a mother.  With prostate cancer, issues of sexual performance and incontinence put a strain on a married couple’s relationship.  Problems such as these also occur in non-traditional families and result in a significant amount of emotional turmoil.  Addressing this emotional turmoil is one of the major changes society has gone through in recent years and will continue to be an area of increasing importance as far as cancer is concerned.
            As mentioned in the Individual who gets Cancer section, how cancer patients deal with stress in some respects is as important as the anti-cancer therapy that they receive for the disease.  Excessive stress lowers the body’s ability to not only fight the cancer, but also heal from the deleterious effects of chemotherapy.  In addition to these effects associated with having cancer, caregivers (husbands, wives, same-sex partners, or friends) undergo tremendous stress dealing with the day-to-day events surrounding their loved one with cancer. 
Psychological intervention methods (psychotherapy) methods such as mentioned in the previous section are available for both cancer patients and their family members.  However, many non-traditional family members such as same-sex partners face discrimination when participating in such programs that are usually tailored to patients or family members of traditional family units.  In many cases these programs are vital to either the patient, who is undergoing cancer treatment and needs to deal with the stress associated with it, or a partner who needs the feeling that they are not alone in their struggle to cope with a loved one who has this disease.
            Another area of change that has taken place because of the advanced technology involved with cancer treatment and the resuscitation of patients near death is the do not resuscitate (DNR) option.  In many cases a family member(s) is asked (when the patient is incapable of making the decision) to sign a document (DNR form) that would allow the physician to end further treatment and care when a crisis occurs and the patient is near death.  There are two factors that have impacted this aspect of cancer treatment and care.
             First there is the technology.  A person can now be kept alive using advanced technology that allows a persons body to exist in a coma-like state for extended periods of time.  During that time it is possible (in a minority of cases) that the patient not only survives the cancer, but also heals their body during the coma state.  Thirty years ago this technology was unavailable and when a patient went into crisis they died.  However, today the physician must consult either the patient or a family member and make them aware of the situation at which point the DNR form may come under consideration. 
This is a complex issue because there is a shred of hope that the resuscitation and further treatment for the disease may actually free the person of cancer.  Then there is the suffering involved with the treatment and many patients opt to sign the form to not only alleviate their own suffering, but the suffering of loved ones who must witness the pain and anguish of continued treatments.  There are also ethical issues involved when the patient can not make the decision themselves because unfortunately in some cases it is in the best interest of the family member to allow the patient to die because they would be the beneficiary of the patient’s estate.  All of these issues were never dealt with before in society and the hope is that many of these cases are resolved properly, ethically, and in the best interest of the patient and their family members. 
The next area of social change as far as families and cancer is concerned is the “cost” of cancer.  There are two types, which are emotional and financial.  Both of these areas leave long-lasting effects and can literally change the course of events in many people’s lives.  The emotional effects of cancer have been discussed at length in both of these sections, but what hasn’t been thoroughly discussed (except in this section) are the repercussions (“cost”) associated with those emotional aspects of the disease.  For instance with couples and cancer, many times intimacy (emotional or sexual) is negatively affected because often one partner withdraws from the relationship during a critical phase of the cancer treatment.  This may cause resentment by the cancer patient.  This resentment may never go away even though the cancer has gone. 
Situations like this can lead to a break-up many years later and the fact is that neither partner may realize that it began during cancer treatment.  Cancer treatment itself can alter the psychological wellbeing of an individual in ways that are just now being understood.   It has been found that survivors of childhood leukemia are often found to have maturity problems because often when any trauma occurs in youth a part of the adult is “stuck” there.  What happens as they become adults is that their minds often drift back to that time of trauma (cancer treatment), but unknown to them is the fact that they are re-experiencing the emotional state of say, a 12-year old, which was their age when they were treated and cured of their disease. 
This condition can cause severe emotional problems for some adult cancer survivors, but with the help of psychological counseling the problem can be identified and the person can recover.  These are just two of many long-term psychological effects of cancer.  Not long ago, conditions such as this went unrecognized, which resulted in continual suffering from a disease that had been cured.                            
            The financial cost of cancer in many cases, but not all, are obvious due to the fact that even with insurance cancer is an expensive disease to treat.  It can be observed that in many cases when families are put in these situations where insurance doesn’t cover the cost, they must alter their finances.  This affects society because not only are banks affected, but also businesses that no longer provide services to these families because the money has been diverted to pay for expenses associated with the cancer treatment of a family member. 
Cancer cost can also affect retirement savings and in some cases houses are sold or have to be re-mortgaged to meet this new financial responsibility.  Then there are the hidden expenditures associated with having a family member with cancer.  Hospital visits by family members cost money such as lost wages, transportation, food and lodging.  Many times the family simple runs out of money after long periods of treatment and relapse where the process becomes repetitive and financially draining.  Often friends and extended family members hold fund raising events to offset these cost, which at times can spiral out of control.  Because cancer care became increasingly expensive over time, the fund raising efforts grew into what is now considered a small industry.
            By the 1990s the cost of cancer care and research had increased dramatically and the death rate from cancer, despite being reduced, was over a half-million annually (Anderson 2002).  Many of these grass-roots efforts to pay for the cancer care of an individual were converted into non-profit organizations, which began to raise money to financially support the care of other patients and fund cancer research.  The 1990s heralded several significant social changes associated with cancer.  As mentioned previously in the section, in the late-1980s, where there was an even higher cancer death rate, major cancer fund raising organizations such as The John Wayne Foundation, The Susan G. Koman Foundation, and Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation were formed and begun to raise billions for research and cancer patient care.  Many of these organizations such as the Vince Lombardi Foundation raised money for the establishment of cancer center (patient and research) facilities and sponsored events to raise money for cancer research.  This was a significant change in society as far as cancer was concerned, but the latest area to be impacted is cancer awareness.  As well as raising money for cancer research many of these organizations such as the Susan G. Komen Foundation began to publicly advocate the promotion of cancer awareness, mostly through TV and print adds.  In addition, the government has been increasing its efforts to educate the public about cancer by using several government-funded organizations such as the American Cancer Society (ACS), National Cancer Institute (NCI), and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).  These organizations disseminate cancer information not only to the public, but also to physicians, scientist, and administrators involved in cancer care, research, and treatment.
            It is apparent that during the mid-1980s an explosion of activity occurred concerning cancer in society.  Family members of those stricken with the disease initiated most of the public efforts.  These efforts were not only in response to the suffering and death of family members, but also the “cost” of cancer as described above.  Never before in the history of cancer in society has there been so much activity as that seen in the 1990s.  Despite the fact that the death rate from major cancers has fallen, nearly 5,000 people a day are diagnosed with the disease.  Because of these cancer fund raising and awareness initiatives many of these people will be successfully treated because of advancements in cancer treatments through research and early detection through awareness of cancer symptoms.  The family has played a major role in the progress toward a cancer-free society and the hope is that this will continue into the future.