Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7330714 Social Science & Medicine 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Increasing numbers of women are surviving breast cancer, but little is known about the long-term implications of having survived a life-threatening illness and living with embodied reminders of its potential to return. Twenty-four women aged between 42 and 80 (median = 51)who had been treated for early stage breast cancer in the UK between 6 months and 29 years previously, were recruited through local media and interviewed. Analysis of their narratives revealed challenges in the post-treatment period that were conceptualised as biographical disruption and liminality. Although no longer ill, an ongoing fear of recurrence combined with embodied changes prevented a return to 'normal' i.e. a pre-cancer state in terms of health status, identity and relationships. We argue that following the biographical disruption of breast cancer, a 'new normal' entails a continual renegotiation of identities, daily lives and futures as time passes and lives evolve.
Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
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