How Caregivers Can Support Cancer Survivors’ Mental Health
Cancer can take a toll on survivors’ mental health; they can often feel stressed and overwhelmed. Cancer survivors may feel emotional distress like depression, fear, and anxiety after being diagnosed with cancer. Others have trouble remembering things or paying attention as a result of their cancer treatment. Some survivors have only mild symptoms for a short time, while others have more severe symptoms that interfere with their normal daily activities, work, and personal relationships. Unfortunately, fewer than one-third of survivors who have mental health concerns talk to their doctor about them, and many survivors do not use services like professional counseling or support groups.
What Can You Do?
- Be sensitive to the survivor’s emotional needs, and help him or her manage stress and talk about his or her feelings.
- Encourage the survivor to seek help such as joining a support group.
- Talk to psychologists or social workers to find appropriate and affordable mental health and social support services.
- Help the survivor lead a physically active life. Physical activity has been linked to lower rates of depression among cancer survivors.
Related Research
- Depression and quality of life before and after breast cancer diagnosis in older women from the Women’s Health Initiative
- Psychological distress in long-term survivors of adult-onset cancer
- The essential role of public health in preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health of cancer survivors
- Current depression among adult cancer survivors
- Depression and anxiety in long-term cancer survivors compared with spouses and healthy controls
- Symptom burden and quality of life in survivorship
- Mental and physical health–related quality of life among U.S. cancer survivors
- Page last reviewed: May 30, 2017
- Page last updated: May 30, 2017
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