Diagnosis of cancer brings about some crisis to almost everyone. The reason for this crisis is that most people do not have habitual solutions to cancer-related crisis, followed by a state of confusion that there is no knowing what you actually think about it I will. How to evaluate the reality or how to develop the outcome of the crisis. Information is necessary, but due to the influence and unfamiliarity of the situation, it is more difficult to accept the broader impact of the information you receive, or even more difficult to understand. In a nutshell, the crisis usually places people in an indifferent situation and leads to a panic.
To make it even more difficult, for most people diagnosed with cancer, cancer is not just a crisis, it is a series of crises. You can even find out earlier that you are in danger of diagnosis, or you are concerned about potential symptoms of cancer. Whether it is surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy or comprehensive treatment, there is a crisis during the initial intensive care
After intensive care, there is usually a crisis. The end of intensive care begins with a waiting period for judging whether treatment is effective or not. Some cancer patients feel safer about the possibility of cure or control of cancer while undergoing treatment and some are afraid when not receiving treatment.
For those with treatment options, each treatment cycle can cause a crisis. There may be a period of crisis related to side effects. When this disease recurs, a new crisis will occur. A common factor in every crisis period is that fear and uncertainty often accompany the crisis. Fear is part of cancer. Fear is normal. This is a basic human emotion. Can suppress the fear associated with cancer
The financial crisis is similar to cancer symptoms. The crisis and the accompanying panic are painful in themselves, but the fundamental problem is not so obvious, but more important. As dust settles in the 2008 crisis and subsequent reforms, it is time to ask now. The best understanding of the crisis in historical context. Specifically, the latest era of banking policy is deregulation. Politicians must do so in order to eliminate the strict legal regulations and regulations imposed after the Great Depression. Certainly, many restrictions need to be updated or invalidated. They are. However, with the deregulation of banks, a new philosophy has come to dominate the minds of academia, industry, and policy makers. That theory is that the country benefits from a competitive and profitable banking system that is only possible if the government is not engaged in banking.
To make it even more difficult, for most people diagnosed with cancer, cancer is not just a crisis, it is a series of crises. You can even find out earlier that you are in danger of diagnosis, or you are concerned about potential symptoms of cancer. There was a crisis during the initial intensive care, whether it was surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy or comprehensive treatment. After intensive care, there is usually a crisis. The end of intensive care begins with a waiting period for judging whether treatment is effective or not. Some cancer patients feel safer about the possibility of cure or control of cancer while undergoing treatment and some are afraid when not receiving treatment.
Diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer is a crisis that affects women's physical, social and spiritual lives. Investigating the perception of women's illness is important for treatment decisions. Therefore, we identified social recognition and interpretation of women diagnosed with breast cancer during and after treatment. At the diagnosis / treatment stage, acceptance or rebellion of women's illness differs in social interpretation after treatment. All stages of breast cancer have the same negative effects as her body in the social life of the affected individual. Nurses play an important role in dealing with these adverse effects. It is therefore necessary to sociologically understand and explain what is said about the adverse effects of this disease and how to interpret those information.
Social recognition of breast cancer in women who are still receiving treatment or are completed: qualitative research